0 moving or speaking slowly with little energy, often in an attractive way:
1 lacking energy, or causing a lack of energy or enthusiasm:
It has been described as an airy and vague poetry, languid and fluid, set in an atmosphere of shadows and dreams.
Nor does it help us to say that every extension of the franchise has been given to a class who were languid in their desire to secure it.
There are others whose charity is of a more languid description—a charity which needs the stimulus and the excitement of something to provoke and bring it into activity.
When does he intend to shake off that air of languid disinterest and do something about the railways industry and investment before the industry crumbles entirely?
The party will implode upon itself, smiling sanguinely and with a stiff upper lip to the last behind its languid leader.
The attitude became languid and the amount of money collected did not pay for the cost of administration.
It would advertise something which is not at present understood, and it would arouse feelings which are, unfortunately, all too languid.
They appear languid and bored by the accusations.