lethargic
adjective
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L338114 on Wikidata ↗Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ləˈθɑɹd͡ʒɪk/ / /ləˈθɑːd͡ʒək/ / /ləˈθɑː.d͡ʒɪk/
adj
Etymology: Learned borrowing from Ancient Greek ληθαργικός (lēthargikós), from λήθαργος (lḗthargos, “forgetful, lethargic”), from λήθη (lḗthē, “a forgetting, forgetfulness”) (from which Lethe (“river in Hades”)) + ἀργός (argós, “not working”). By surface analysis, lethargy + -ic.
- Sluggish, slow.
“[That cat] hasn't caught a mouse since he was a slip of a kitten. Except when eating, he does nothing but sleep. Lethargic is the word that springs to the lips. If you cast an eye on him, you will see that he's asleep now.”
“She was, in fact, constitutionally impervious to statistics and preferred to study the be-headphoned group of fifteen or so lethargic wanderers who were taking even less notice of the remorseless squawkings than she was.”
- Indifferent, apathetic.