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It is often used as a pejorative; terms for a person seen to be lazy include "couch potato", "slacker", and "bludger". Related concepts include sloth , a Christian sin, abulia , a medical term for reduced motivation, and lethargy , a state of lacking energy.
Lazy (band), a Japanese rock band; Lazy Lester, American blues harmonica player Leslie Johnson (1933–2018) Lazy Bill Lucas (1918–1982), American blues musician and singer; Doug Lazy, stage name of American hip hop and dance music producer and DJ Gene Douglas Finley; Lazy, an American band featuring former members of the Supreme Beings of ...
LazyTown (Icelandic: Latibær) is an Icelandic children's educational musical television series created by aerobics champion Magnús Scheving. [1] Originally produced in English , it has been broadcast in dozens of languages globally.
She meets the kids of LazyTown, and after meeting the slightly above-average hero Sportacus, he shows them the energetic and healthy lifestyle. However, the local villain - Robbie Rotten, wants LazyTown to stay lazy, and he attempts to put Sportacus out of commission in various ways. However, when one of his plans accidentally targets Bessie ...
Until 1947 the town was the seat of the Rokitno Szlacheckie municipality. In the years 1975–1998 the town administratively belonged to the Katowice province. As of 2019, the town has 6,811 inhabitants. During World War II, German occupiers changed the name to Lazy then to Lasern without a legislative decree.
Lazy evaluation can also lead to reduction in memory footprint, since values are created when needed. [19] In practice, lazy evaluation may cause significant performance issues compared to eager evaluation. For example, on modern computer architectures, delaying a computation and performing it later is slower than performing it immediately.
Lazy (Japanese: レイジー, Hepburn: Reijī, stylized as LAZY) is a Japanese rock band founded in 1973 by young classmates Hironobu Kageyama, Hiroyuki Tanaka and Akira Takasaki. History [ edit ]
The Right to Be Lazy (French: Le Droit à la paresse) is a book by Paul Lafargue, published in 1883. In it, Lafargue, a French socialist, opposes the labour movement 's fight to expand wage labour rather than abolish or at least limit it.