Languid in a sentence as an adjective

The goal to keep the web in that languid state is of the same ilk of the buggy whip.

You know, color me stupid, but at this time, I don't think we need this kind of languid, laconic writing.

[1] I'm referring to the aesthetic and energy here, not the content, which wasn't quite "languid..".

"So plenty of people even in languid Washington are frustrated with the current lack of fee shifting.

It's not just that - both Patlabor and Evangelion often would take a slow, languid tone to observe the city.

While this may provide a very safe platform such as iOS, it is also a stifled and languid platform due to the bottleneck of the approval process.

I'm not sure snowy wilderness is as suitable an environment as languid candlelit for very precise blocking.

Celebrities bribing their kids into college is but one of the more languid manifestations of the bankruptcy of this belief system.

We stand on the precipice of a revolution in liquid-sipping robot technology; our children will scarcely believe the languid speed of their parents' liquid-sipping robots.

I'm pretty sure I didn't break the sentence barrier those times either, but then, as you can tell, especially from this pernicious example, I'm prone to more lengthy run-on sentences — overloaded and dripping with information in a languid fashion.

I've only seen up to episode 3 now, but I can elaborate a bit on perhaps my biggest specific complaint so far: basically, too much fallback on disaster movie tropes, too much screen time on languid dialogues instead of trying to show much more of the vast amount of documented fascinating stories and details.

The country remained independent, and human rights situation was much better than in Russia.> he had mainly good memories—of “long dinners discussing politics,” the “excitement of new books,” “languid sunsets, whole-night concerts, epic soccer games, girls in miniskirts.”In soviet Russia, a long dinner discussing politics would cause the participants to be sent to Siberia, there were no whole-night concerts, and miniskirts only appeared on girls after the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991.

Languid definitions

adjective

lacking spirit or liveliness; "a lackadaisical attempt"; "a languid mood"; "a languid wave of the hand"; "a hot languorous afternoon"

See also: dreamy lackadaisical languorous