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frequently_asked_questions_files/Oxford Thesaurus.pdf

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suspend; dismiss, discharge, fire, let go, cashier, drum out of<br />

the corps, Colloq (give the) sack, (give the) axe, kick out,<br />

(give the) boot, boot out, give (someone) his or her walking<br />

papers: Fifty workers were laid off because business was slack.<br />

b let up, quit (it), stop (it), cease, desist, leave off, leave<br />

alone, Colloq knock (it) off, cut (it) out, come off (it): I<br />

wish you'd lay off for a while and stop bothering me. You must<br />

lay off phoning your mother twice a day. 17 lay on. a provide,<br />

cater (for), supply: The company laid on quite a Christmas<br />

party. b impose, charge, assess; demand, require: In addition<br />

to enforcing payment of back taxes, they laid on a penalty of 20<br />

per cent. 18 lay out. a design, plan, outline, sketch, arrange,<br />

set up: The art department laid out the advertisements for the<br />

new campaign. b advance, disburse, spend, expend, pay, give,<br />

contribute, Colloq shell out, ante up, kick in with, fork out:<br />

The salesmen often lay out the money for their expenses and are<br />

then reimbursed. c lay low, floor, prostrate, knock down or out,<br />

strike or cut down, flatten, fell, strike down, Colloq knock for<br />

six, kayo or K.O.: He laid out the challenger with a blow to<br />

the solar plexus. 19 lay up. a lay in, amass, accumulate, save<br />

(up), hoard, preserve, store, keep, put away, put by: We laid<br />

up a supply of canned goods for the winter. b hospitalize,<br />

incapacitate, disable, confine to bed, keep indoors: She has<br />

been laid up with a virus all week.<br />

layý adj. 1 secular, non-clerical, laic, non-ecclesiastical: He<br />

served as a lay preacher for many years. 2 amateur,<br />

non-professional, non-specialist: Members of the lay public did<br />

not immediately understand the dangers of the greenhouse effect.<br />

lay° n. ballad, song, air, refrain, strain, melody; poem, ode,<br />

lyric, rhyme, ballade: Macaulay wrote a book entitled Lays of<br />

Ancient Rome .<br />

lazy adj. 1 indolent, slothful, dilatory, idle, shiftless, inactive,<br />

listless, fain‚ant, otiose, slack, lax, lethargic: He's so lazy<br />

and so rich that he pays someone just to walk his dog. 2 slow,<br />

languid, easy, easygoing, sluggish, slow-moving, languorous:<br />

The hot lazy summer days were whiled away fishing.<br />

12.2 lead...<br />

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