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All expeditive antonyms

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adjective expeditive

  • clumsy — A clumsy person moves or handles things in a careless, awkward way, often so that things are knocked over or broken.
  • slow — moving or proceeding with little or less than usual speed or velocity: a slow train.
  • sluggish — indisposed to action or exertion; lacking in energy; lazy; indolent: a sluggish disposition.
  • boring — Someone or something boring is so dull and uninteresting that they make people tired and impatient.
  • dull — not sharp; blunt: a dull knife.
  • flexible — capable of being bent, usually without breaking; easily bent: a flexible ruler.
  • good — Graph-Oriented Object Database
  • impermanent — not permanent or enduring; transitory.
  • insecure — subject to fears, doubts, etc.; not self-confident or assured: an insecure person.
  • loose — free or released from fastening or attachment: a loose end.
  • moral — of, relating to, or concerned with the principles or rules of right conduct or the distinction between right and wrong; ethical: moral attitudes.
  • movable — capable of being moved; not fixed in one place, position, or posture.
  • plodding — to walk heavily or move laboriously; trudge: to plod under the weight of a burden.
  • tardy — late; behind time; not on time: How tardy were you today?
  • unattached — not attached.
  • unfixed — to render no longer fixed; unfasten; detach; loosen; free.
  • unhurried — not hurried; leisurely; deliberate: an unhurried day; an unhurried decision.
  • upright — erect or vertical, as in position or posture.
  • delayed — of or relating to a particle, as a neutron or alpha particle, that is emitted from an excited nucleus formed in a nuclear reaction, the emission occurring some time after the reaction is completed.
  • idle — not working or active; unemployed; doing nothing: idle workers.
  • inactive — not active: an inactive volcano.
  • later — occurring, coming, or being after the usual or proper time: late frosts; a late spring.
  • lazy — averse or disinclined to work, activity, or exertion; indolent.
  • leisurely — acting, proceeding, or done without haste; unhurried; deliberate: a leisurely conversation.
  • ignorant — lacking in knowledge or training; unlearned: an ignorant man.
  • stupid — lacking ordinary quickness and keenness of mind; dull.
  • uneducated — not educated.
  • languishing — becoming languid, in any way.
  • slack — not tight, taut, firm, or tense; loose: a slack rope.
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