- - Weariness
- - Lack of energy, listlessness
- - allow husband gary to display sloth
- - Sluggish feeling
- - Thy large characters could induce inertia
- - slow movement of earth — perhaps gravity's extremely likely to be controlling
- - George Hartley confused about lassitude
- - Allow the hospital to treat Gary for lassitude
- - Lack of energy and enthusiasm
- - Greatly disturbed over husband showing sluggishness
- - Say it's okay on tap and key for the odd rugby period of sluggishness
- - torpidity
- - Sloth
- - Lassitude
- - Listlessness
- - Languor
- - Apathy
- - Lack of vitality
- - Lack of vigor
- - Lack of energy
- - Indifference
- - Sluggishness
- - Greatly upset about hot, sleepy condition
- - Lassitude, languor
- - Greatly shaken consuming heroin as it saps the energy
- - Greatly shaken consuming heroin - it leaves one with a lack of energy
- - Torpor
- - Spring fever symptom
- - Inertia
- - Greatly upset over heroin - it leaves one with lack of energy
- - Greatly agitated about hospital's inertia
- - Head initially greatly put out by state of apathy
- - Sloth, lust, envy, anger haunting all those heartlessly criminal?
- - Large old English character, a king grossly discontented, showing torpor
- - Good to be in Harley Street, finally treated for condition
- - Sluggish quality
- - That spring-fever feeling.
- - Total indifference.
- - Drowsy
- - learner with awful grey hat revealing lack of energy
- - State of sluggishness
- - Lack of energy or vitality
- - learner with unusually grey hat showing sluggishness
- - inertia allowed henry and gary out
- [ Edit ]
- [ Other definitions ]