Antonyms for slow up


Grammar : Noun, verb
Spell : sloh
Phonetic Transcription : sloʊ


Definition of slow up

Origin :
  • Old English slaw "inactive, sluggish, torpid, lazy," also "not clever," from Proto-Germanic *slæwaz (cf. Old Saxon sleu "blunt, dull," Middle Dutch slee, Dutch sleeuw "sour, tart, blunt," Old High German sleo "blunt, dull," Old Norse sljor, Danish sløv, Swedish slö "blunt, dull"). Meaning "taking a long time" is attested from early 13c. Meaning "dull, tedious" is from 1841. As an adverb c.1500. The slows "imaginary disease to account for lethargy" is from 1843.
  • As in slack : noun looseness, excess
  • As in slowdown : noun slacking off; gradual decrease
  • As in lag : verb move slowly; delay
  • As in mire : verb delay, catch up in
  • As in retard : verb hinder, obstruct
  • As in set back : verb delay, hinder
  • As in shelve : verb defer, postpone
  • As in bog down : verb stick; become stuck
  • As in detain : verb hold, keep back; arrest
Example sentences :
  • Mr. Payton hesitated, giving the command to slow up, nevertheless.
  • Extract from : « Lucile Triumphant » by Elizabeth M. Duffield
  • “We can slow up a bit again in a few minutes,” said the stranger.
  • Extract from : « The Hilltop Boys » by Cyril Burleigh
  • You can't afford to slow up the play by waiting for your end to get to you.
  • Extract from : « Left Guard Gilbert » by Ralph Henry Barbour
  • Some one called: "Slow up there, now," and then the door opened.
  • Extract from : « Sister Carrie » by Theodore Dreiser
  • Have to slow up because the head wind is filling the scows with water.
  • Extract from : « Young Alaskans in the Far North » by Emerson Hough
  • The train began to slow up—perhaps we were to be saved, after all.
  • Extract from : « Tramping with Tramps » by Josiah Flynt
  • When in Cheyenne he was on his last legs—had begun, as they say nowadays, to slow up.
  • Extract from : « The Prairie Schooner » by William Francis Hooker
  • This caused the Confederate lines to slow up in their advance.
  • Extract from : « Lee and Longstreet at High Tide » by Helen D. Longstreet
  • You have a rotten tendency to slow up at the line, just when you should be going the hardest.
  • Extract from : « Left Half Harmon » by Ralph Henry Barbour
  • The rule for all divers, therefore, is "slow down, slow up."
  • Extract from : « The Romance of Modern Mechanism » by Archibald Williams

Synonyms for slow up

Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019