English edit

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

flaccider

  1. comparative form of flaccid: more flaccid
    • 1834, Walter Savage Landor, Citation and examination of William Shakspeare, Euseby Treen, Joseph Carnaby and Silas Gough, Clerk:
      But I pretermitted it, finding that my hand is no longer the hand it was, or rather that the breed of geese is very much degenerated, and that their quills, like men's manners, are grown softer and flaccider.