be+laid

  • 61laid — 1. AND layed mod. drug intoxicated. (See also laid out.) □ Man, did I get myself laid. □ Are you too layed to drive home? 2. mod. copulated with. (Usually objectionable.) □ Well, you look laid, all right …

    Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions

  • 62laid back — 1. mod. calm and relaxed. □ Sam is not what I would call laid back. □ You re really one laid back guy! 2. mod. alcohol or drug intoxicated. □ He’s a little laid back and can’t come to the phone …

    Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions

  • 63laid-back — ADJ GRADED If you describe someone as laid back, you mean that they behave in a calm relaxed way as if nothing will ever worry them. [INFORMAL] Nothing worried him, he was really laid back... Everyone here has a really laid back attitude …

    English dictionary

  • 64laid-back — a person who is laid back is very relaxed and does not get anxious or angry very often. I can imagine he s good to work for he seems very laid back. He comes across as your typical laid back Californian …

    New idioms dictionary

  • 65Laid paper — Paper Pa per (p[=a] p[ e]r), n. [F. papier, fr. L. papyrus papyrus, from which the Egyptians made a kind of paper, Gr. pa pyros. Cf. {Papyrus}.] 1. A substance in the form of thin sheets or leaves intended to be written or printed on, or to be… …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 66laid-back — adjective Date: 1969 having a relaxed style or character < laid back music > • laid backness noun …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 67Laid to Rest (film) — Infobox Film name = Laid to Rest image size = caption = Promotional poster director = Robert Hall producer = Bobbi Hall Chang Tseng writer = Robert Hall narrator = starring = Bobbi Sue Luther Lena Headey Kevin Gage music = cinematography = Scott&#8230; …

    Wikipedia

  • 68laid-back — /layd bak /, adj. Slang. 1. relaxed or unhurried: laid back music rhythms. 2. free from stress; easygoing; carefree: a laid back way of living. Also laidback. [1905 10, for an earlier sense; 1970 75 for current sense] * * * …

    Universalium

  • 69laid up — adjective a) Unable to move about normally due to illness or injury, especially when confined to bed. Flesh occasionally feels stalemated, more laid up than at home. b) Stored at a dock or other place of safety, as with a ship. He was still laid&#8230; …

    Wiktionary

  • 70laid to rest —    dead    A monumental favourite, as in at rest:     She came to the end of the road only five months after we had laid Father to rest, so they were not parted long. (Tyrrell, 1973)    Anyone dying at sea might be laid in the lockers, for&#8230; …

    How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms