unlax
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]unlax (third-person singular simple present unlaxes, present participle unlaxing, simple past and past participle unlaxed)
- (intransitive, colloquial) To relax.
- 1926, Amos 'n' Andy:
- Episode or segment titled "Check and double check (Don't hold your breath, unlax)." (ref. "Black Radio: Telling it Like it Was", Indiana University Archive, Collector's No. BROS0429, Shelf No. cass 1696; http://webapp1.dlib.indiana.edu/findingaids/view?doc.view=entire_text&docId=VAC0316 retrieved 2017-02-09)
- 2003, Alice Denham, My Darling from the Lions, page 164:
- Inside the dollhouse they unlaxed and had a drink.
- 2010, Harrison Lee Rodebaugh, Gently Into The Night, page 60:
- “Unlax, Doc. Remember when Phil was having that squirrel problem with his cedar siding? The little bastards ate a couple of holes in his eaves and built a nest in his attic. I'm just going to ask him if he still has that problem, Sam.”
- 2015, Brian Cook, Hands Across The Sea, page 190:
- There's one neighborhood tavern where the regulars and irregulars go after a hard day to unlax and rewind, throw back a few, and just hang out - you know the one.