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- LAPSE Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of LAPSE is a slight error typically due to forgetfulness or inattention How to use lapse in a sentence Synonym Discussion of Lapse
- LAPSE | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
if something such as an agreement lapses, it ends legally or officially because nothing has been done to make it continue, for example because payments are not made:
- Lapses - definition of lapses by The Free Dictionary
To fall from a previous level or standard, as of accomplishment, quality, or conduct: lapse into bad habits; a team that lapsed into mediocrity halfway through the season b To deviate from a prescribed or accepted way: lapse into heresy c To pass gradually or smoothly; slip: lapse into reverie 2 a
- LAPSE Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com
to fall, slip, or sink; subside to lapse into silence to fall into disuse The custom lapsed after a period of time to deviate or abandon principles, beliefs, etc to lapse into heresy to fall spiritually, as an apostate to lapse from grace to pass away, as time; elapse
- lapse noun - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes . . .
Definition of lapse noun from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary a small mistake, especially one that is caused by forgetting something or by being careless A momentary lapse in the final set cost her the match I had a momentary lapse when I couldn't remember his name
- LAPSE definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
A lapse is a moment or instance of bad behaviour by someone who usually behaves well On Friday he showed neither decency nor dignity It was an uncommon lapse A lapse of something such as concentration or judgment is a temporary lack of that thing, which can often cause you to make a mistake
- Lapse Definition Meaning | Britannica Dictionary
He blamed the error on a minor mental lapse As he grew older he began to have memory lapses [=times when he forgot things that he should have remembered]
- Lapse - Definition, Meaning Synonyms | Vocabulary. com
First used to imply a “slip of the memory,” the noun lapse evolved in the sixteenth century from the Latin lapsus, meaning “a slipping and falling, falling into error ” The connotation of “a moral slip” developed later, and the verb form came into existence even later than that
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