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Relaxation   /rˌilæksˈeɪʃən/   Listen
Relaxation

noun
1.
(physiology) the gradual lengthening of inactive muscle or muscle fibers.
2.
(physics) the exponential return of a system to equilibrium after a disturbance.  Synonym: relaxation behavior.
3.
A feeling of refreshing tranquility and an absence of tension or worry.  Synonym: easiness.
4.
An occurrence of control or strength weakening.  Synonyms: loosening, slackening.  "The loosening of his grip" , "The slackening of the wind"
5.
Freedom from activity (work or strain or responsibility).  Synonyms: ease, repose, rest.
6.
A method of solving simultaneous equations by guessing a solution and then reducing the errors that result by successive approximations until all the errors are less than some specified amount.  Synonym: relaxation method.
7.
The act of making less strict.  Synonyms: liberalisation, liberalization.



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"Relaxation" Quotes from Famous Books



... Thomas. Charles was a degenerate who reproduced at a distance of three generations his great-great-grandmother, Adelaide Fouque. He did not look more than twelve years old, and his intelligence was that of a child of five. There was in him a relaxation of tissues, due to degeneracy, and the slightest exertion produced hemorrhage. Charles was not kindly treated by his stepfather, and generally lived with his great-grandmother Felicite Rougon. He was frequently taken to visit the aged Adelaide Fouque in the asylum at Les Tulettes, ...
— A Zola Dictionary • J. G. Patterson

... serve in these hospitals in place of the same discalced religious, and at their own petition—because of the disorderly acts that the brothers must have committed in visiting private houses in the city in the quality of surgeons, and in methods from which, they tell me, proceeded the relaxation of the order, as well as other things that deserve correction. For many reasons concerning the service of God and of your Majesty, it has been, and is, advisable that these hospitals be administered by the brothers of [St.] John of God, and that the Order of St. Francis attend to their ...
— The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898 • Various

... which was familiar to me, since not only on my several journeys down and up the river had I particularly noticed this spot, but I had visited it in 1840 with Colonel Gawler, the then Governor of South Australia; who, finding that he required relaxation from his duties, invited me to accompany him on an excursion he proposed taking to the eastward of the Mount Lofty Range, for the purpose of examining the country along the shores of Lake Victoria and the River Murray, as far as the Great Bend. It was a part of the province at that time ...
— Expedition into Central Australia • Charles Sturt

... weight was to be avoided. At times some of the men amused themselves by diving under the boats, swimming around and ahead of them, or surprised a coyote on the bank with a rifle-shot, and otherwise enjoyed the relaxation we had well earned by our toil in Red Canyon. The river was smooth and deep and about six hundred to eight hundred feet wide. At the very foot of the valley we made a camp under the shadow of that magnificent and unrivalled portal, the Gate of Lodore, which had been visible to us for many miles; ...
— The Romance of the Colorado River • Frederick S. Dellenbaugh

... independence, and it had been proved to the traditional enemy of England that the time had come when it would be profitable to help the revolted colonies. But the alliance brought troubles as well as blessings in its train. It induced a relaxation in popular energy, and carried with it new and difficult problems for the commander-in-chief. The successful management of allies, and of allied forces, had been one of the severest tests of the statesmanship of William III., and had constituted one of the principal glories of Marlborough. A ...
— George Washington, Vol. I • Henry Cabot Lodge


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