laggard的意思和读音

laggard

: [ˈlæɡərd] : [ˈlæɡə(r)d]

n.

adj.

laggards  

n.leader

n.straggler,dawdler,slowcoach,foot-dragger,lazybones

laggardn.

1.a slow and lazy person, organization, etc.

adj.1.,

n.1.,2.

n.1.a person or organization that is slow to do something or slow to make progress

1. drunkard laggard Spaniard 西 ...

2. 〖 dawdle〗 〖 dilatory;laggard〖 delay〗 ...

4. haggard adj. laggard adj. , niggard n.

5. drunkard laggard steward ...

6. niggard n. 13 laggard a. n. sluggard n. ...

7. ... 〖 thebackofaChineserobeorjacket〗 〖 backward;laggard;thosewholagbehind〗 〖 thePosteriorJinDyn…

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1.Compared with all this, America has been a laggard in the race to repulse.

2.It marks the first time P&G has linked its corporate name to its brands in the UK, making it something of a laggard.

3.So the fact that Barack Obama clearly intends to turn America from being a laggard into a leader in this task is therefore encouraging.·(BarackObama)

4.The game is commercial aviation, and Pratt has been a laggard for years despite a strong presence in military engines.

5.'Thailand's at a real risk of becoming a laggard' in the region, he said.

6.All this is part of his election pledge to stimulate the island's laggard economy with closer cross-strait economic ties.

7.The United States has been a laggard for too long on climate change.

8.Then America seemed to be pulling strongly and Europe was the laggard.

9.Often new technology must be embedded in a total solution for a laggard to adopt a new technology.

10.But Massachusetts has been a particular laggard, spending just 1. 8 percent of the settlement funds as originally intended.使1.