English » Polish

I . slow [sləʊ, Am sloʊ] ADJ

2. slow (stupid):

II . slow [sləʊ, Am sloʊ] VB trans, intr

go-slow N Brit ECON

slow down VB trans, intr

slow down work, pace:

I . slow motion CINE N no pl

II . slow motion CINE ADJ

slow-moving ADJ

slow train N

slow-witted ADJ

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Provided that the capitalist relations of production are stable and secure, capital accumulation will continue, despite constant market fluctuations, at a slower or faster pace.
en.wikipedia.org
Any airplane flying with an unducted fan would likely be slower than a modern airliner, but there could be significant fuel savings.
www.wired.com
The trade-off for this accuracy is that compression and decompression paths requiring color-space conversion are generally slower than real-time.
en.wikipedia.org
Malignancies with slower growth rates, such as indolent lymphomas, tend to respond to chemotherapy much more modestly.
en.wikipedia.org
Techniques enabling greater feature precision exist, among them electron beam lithography and particle deposition, but are slower and more resource intensive by comparison.
en.wikipedia.org
The relative speed and nimbleness of ships became important, since a slower ship could be outmaneuvered and disabled by a faster one.
en.wikipedia.org
It has been seen in receptive aphasia that larger lesions correlate to slower recovery.
en.wikipedia.org
In contrast, if you start off drinking hard liquor, you're likely to be drinking at a slower rate and feel drunk faster.
gizmodo.com
The CIO itself was slower to join the purge.
en.wikipedia.org
Converted for military use they were higher, larger and slower than regular (light) galleys.
en.wikipedia.org

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