(v. t.) To waste in sloth; to spend, as time, in idleness; as, to laze away whole days.
Example Sentences:
(1) The 50 best beaches in the world Beaches are good for many things, and not just lazing on, as it happens.
(2) Dogs laze in the stifling afternoon heat of the Shire Valley.
(3) What feels new and fresh here isn't a threesome or a Grindr hook-up, but a scene where AgustÃn and his boyfriend are lazing on the sofa watching television.
(4) You can laze around beside a rooftop pool or dine at the outdoor (buffet) restaurant overlooking the beach.
(5) But lazing on the huge patio overlooking the ocean, well away from other buildings, will make you forget those inconveniences.
(6) Lazing in bed sets you back in this interminable rat race.
(7) Linger over brunch, join in a game of bocce (boules) or just laze by the fire pit.
(8) Next day we lazed on the city's sandy Catalans beach, just a few minutes from our hotel, the oh-so-Marseillaise Richelieu.
(9) Whitetip reef sharks laze ahead of their night-time feed, while mustard-yellow trumpetfish wriggle along past shoals of glittering bigeye jacks.
(10) "We are here for negotiations with Akhmetov," said Anton Kosenko, a self-styled MP of the Donetsk People's Republic, who was wearing a white suit and appeared to be in charge of a dozen fighters with automatic weapons and knives who were lazing on the grass outside the gates to Akhmetov's lavish residence.
(11) Hearing the drumbeat of the pro-marijuana lobby, you'd be excused if you believed the typical Jamaican was a Rastafarian pothead lazing on the beach amid the soporific sound of Bob Marley's One Love.
(12) Laze in the hammocks, splash about in your private pool or help yourself to fruit and veg from the garden and eggs from the free-range chickens.
(13) But the road was calling, just as it had done yesterday, when neither of us had wanted to leave Dar Ayniwen, a beautiful house in Marrakech's Palmeraie suburb, where we had lazed on the terrace and sipped gin and tonics as the call to prayer echoed through the dusk.
(14) While he was there, the editor of the university magazine, Clive James, published an early poem, but mostly Murray "lazed around and read the library.