Catholic Encyclopedia.Kevin Knight.2006.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VIII. — New York: Robert Appleton Company.Nihil Obstat.1910.
• A ___ of bears
• A deadly sin
• Animal that sleeps upside down
• Arboreal animal
• Arboreal mammal
• Aversion to exertion
• Bent to do nothing
• Big-toed animal
• Creepy critter?
• Deadly sin
• Deadly sin that doesn't require much effort
• Deadly sin that doesn't take any effort
• Disinclination to exertion
• Energy-efficient deadly sin?
• Exertion aversion
• Faineance
• Hardly a speed demon
• Holt's laziness
• Idleness
• Indolence
• It doesn't do much
• It may be out on a limb
• It's deemed deadly
• Its average ground speed is 6-8 feet per minute
• Laziest of the deadly sins
• Laziness
• Leaf-eating critter
• Loafer's forte
• Loafer's sin
• Mammal in a 2006 SNL short
• Mammal with a low metabolism
• One of seven
• One of seven deadlies
• One of seven deadly sins
• One of the deadly seven
• One of the deadly sins
• One of the Seven Deadly Sins
• Opposite of industry
• Paragon of slowness
• Poky critter
• Procrastinator's problem
• Rainforest beast
• Shiftlessness
• Slo-mo mammal
• Slow mover
• Slow-moving beast
• Slow-moving critter
• Slow-moving mammal
• Slow-moving tree dweller of South America
• Slow-moving tree hanger
• Slow-moving tree-hanging animal
• Slow, tree-dwelling mammal
• Slugabed's sin
• Sluggard's condition
• Sluggard's sin
• Sluggardliness
• Sluggish animal
• Small property at top of hill (5)
• South American slowpoke
• Symbol of laziness
• Tendency to remain at rest
• Three-toed creature
• Two- or three-toed critter
• Two-toed type
• Unau or ai
• Upside-down branch hanger
• Upside-down sleeper
• Upside-down tree-hanging critter
• A disinclination to work or exert yourself
• Any of several slow-moving arboreal mammals of South and Central America
• They hang from branches back downward and feed on leaves and fruits
• Apathy and inactivity in the practice of virtue (personified as one of the deadly sins)
1. леность, праздность
2. медлительность, мешкотность
3. зоол. ленивец (Bradypodidae)