Verb: when you stick it in soft and pray it gets hard.
"Yeah, last night it wouldn't get hard, so we were just loose goosing it and it ended up fine"
When your not going to tell some one something g or give them as little detail as possible
I heard you banged hi. In his face
I’m not gonna chat to loose
When a woman is so loose, she must twist her hips to apply pelvic torque for you to feel anything. The term may be applied either to the technique, or the individual who must utilize it.
After the sixth kid, my wife was a loose wrench.
Stray public hair visible outside a lady's panty line. Arguably equally applicable to men in this age of metrosexuality and manscaping.
"Darling, I spy loose baccy down there; you'd better get your strimmer into action!"
Relationship with no clear understanding.
Jamie: Yo leave her alone man
Jathan: man we just have loose ties
Refers to da assorted coins dat you save up to bribe a formerly-celibate chick into spreading her legs for you and/or otherwise allowing you access to her more-intimate "real estate"; said proffered funds eventually cause da gal to modify her behavior and become more "easy" wif her body.
Giving a hot chick cash for permitting you to "let you proceed to fourth base" wif her may indeed seem like an awesome "win-win situation", but it can also often bring about "loose change" in her overall sense of decency and morals, and then she'll allow pretty much any guy to "get it on" with her, possibly leading to jealousy/resentment among her male acquaintances, STDs, unwanted pregnancies, etc.
A sentence that does not end with the completion of its main clause, but continues with one or more subordinate clauses or other modifiers.
It is also known as a Cumulative Sentence. Writers use these types of sentences when they want to put forth the main idea first, and provide details to elucidate the idea further thereafter. They use these details in the form of dependent or subordinate phrases or clauses.
These types of sentences work better in various forms of writing, specifically in explaining theories, by giving the main idea at the beginning, and then adding more information to build up the idea further.
“Llanblethian hangs pleasantly, with its white cottages, and orchard and other trees…” (The Life of John Sterling, by Thomas Carlyle) This is a good example of a loose sentence.