Adjective
She was tardy to work.
They were tardy in filing the application.
Recent Examples on the Web
Adjective
The money will be given to eligible families with children who are not tardy or absent more than once a week, the newspaper reported.—Danielle Jennings, Peoplemag, 1 May 2024 If a filer forgoes an extension and files late, the person risks additional fees for the tardy submission.—Max Zahn, ABC News, 12 Apr. 2024 For example, the class that watched the tardy slip interaction unfold saw adults model how to successfully manage frustration and de-escalate a situation.—Gail Cornwall, USA TODAY, 4 Apr. 2024 In its tardy response, the Air Force redacted all images of alternate logo designs that didn’t make the cut, according to the magazine.—Passant Rabie / Gizmodo, Quartz, 18 Mar. 2024 Still, this is less than half of the Golden State’s 0.8 percent tardy mortgages at year-end 2019 as well as better than elsewhere in the U.S.
Nationally, there was a 0.57 percent delinquency rate, up 0.14 percentage points in a year.—Jonathan Lansner, San Diego Union-Tribune, 10 Mar. 2024 Collins’s tardy mea culpa is welcome, and so too was the testimony last month of Britain’s prime minister, Rishi Sunak, during the country’s independent public inquiry into its Covid response.—John Fund, National Review, 4 Jan. 2024 Cut to the workers about to do that processing, cramming themselves into small, tardy transit buses early in the morning, like so much human cargo; cut again to the July 2021 launch of the Blue Origin NS-16 rocket into sub-orbital space, with Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos among its vanity crew members.—Guy Lodge, Variety, 29 Jan. 2024 Or the time Robbie wore the wrong jersey during a game, participated in a cow-milking contest and lost a pant leg from a pair of jeans for being tardy one day.—Drew Davison -, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 31 Jan. 2024
These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'tardy.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
Word History
Etymology
Adjective
alteration of earlier tardif, from Anglo-French, from Vulgar Latin *tardivus, from Latin tardus
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