Much more than you asked for…

“lax” is “loose’, as in morals and bowels.

“Re-“ is more complicated. From the Oxford English dictionary:

“re-, prefix

of Latin origin, with the general sense of ‘back’ or ‘again’, occurring in a large number of words directly or indirectly adopted from Latin, or of later Romanic origin, and on the model of these freely employed in English as a prefix to verbs, and to substantives or adjectives derived from these.    In earlier Latin re- was used before consonants, and red- before vowels or h-, as in redīre, redimĕre, redhibēre (rarely in other cases, as in red-dĕre). The latter form appears in Eng. only in a few words which are ultimately of Latin origin, as redeem, redemption, redintegrate. In later Latin the form with d was no longer in use, and re- was employed before vowels as well as consonants, as in reædificāre, reagĕre, reexpectāre, reillūmināre, etc. In a few words adopted from French the prefix has so coalesced with the main part of the word that its real nature is obscured. In some cases this is due to the combination of re- with another prefix, as ad- (Fr. a-) or in- (Fr. en-). For examples of these types, see ransom, rally, rampart.

2.2 The original sense of re- in Latin is that of ‘back’ or ‘backwards’, but in the large number of words formed by its use, the prefix acquires various shades of meaning, of which the following are the most clearly marked. a.2.a ‘Back from a point reached’, ‘back to or towards the starting-point’, as in recēdĕre to draw back, recurrĕre to run back, redūcĕre to lead back, referre to carry back, refugĕre to flee back, remittĕre to send back, respicĕre to look back, retrahĕre to pull back, revocāre to call back. Sometimes the sense of ‘backwards’ is also implied, as in resilīre to spring back or backwards. The return of light and sound is expressed in such verbs as relūcēre and renīdēre to shine or flash back, reboāre to bellow back, resonāre to echo, resound. In many cases the idea of force is present, as in reflectĕre to bend back, repellĕre to drive back, reprimĕre to force back, rescindĕre to cut back; hence arises the sense of resistance, as in reluctārī to struggle against, repugnāre to fight against, reclāmāre to cry out against, recūsāre to refuse. Occasionally the sense passes into that of ‘away’, as in removēre to move back or away, revellĕre to pull away or off. b.2.b ‘Back to the original place or position’, as in recondĕre, repōnĕre, restituĕre, etc. to put back, replace; freq. implying ‘back to one's hands or possession’, as in recipĕre to take back, redimĕre to buy back, rependĕre to pay back, resūmĕre to take back. c.2.c ‘Again’, ‘anew’, originally in cases implying restoration to a previous state or condition, and frequently occurring as a secondary sense in verbs of the two classes already mentioned; further examples are recreāre to create again, reficĕre to make again, reformāre to form again, renovāre to make new again, refrīgēscĕre to grow cold again, revirēscĕre to grow green again. This naturally passes into cases where the action itself is done a second time, as recoquĕre to cook or bake again, refricāre to rub again, regenerāre to produce again, retractāre to handle again, etc. This class of words is largely augmented in later Latin, as reædificāre to build again, rebaptizāre to baptize again, etc. Many of these later compounds have been adopted in English, and have chiefly supplied the models for the new formations illustrated in §5. d.2.d In some cases re- has the same force as Eng. un-, implying an undoing of some previous action, as in recingĕre to ungird, reclūdĕre to unclose, to open, refīgĕre to unfix, resignāre to unseal, revēlāre to unveil. More rarely it expresses direct negation, as in reprobāre to disapprove of. e.2.e ‘Back in a place’, i.e. ‘from going forward’, with verbs of keeping or holding, as retinēre to hold back, religāre to tie back or up, refrēnāre to rein back, reprehendĕre to (seize and) keep back; or ‘without going on or forward’ with verbs of rest, as remanēre, residēre, restāre to stay or stop behind, requiēscĕre to stay quiet, etc. Other shades of this sense appear in relinquĕre to leave behind, reservāre to keep back, store up.    Even in Latin the precise sense of re- is not always clear, and in many words the development of secondary meanings tends greatly to obscure its original force. This loss of distinct meaning is naturally increased in English, when the word has been adopted in a sense more or less remote from the strict etymological significance of the two elements which compose it. In many cases the simple word to which the prefix is attached is wanting in English; in others a change of sound or shifting of stress frequently assists in disguising its original sense. In the Romance languages, as in later Latin, extensive use was made of re- as a prefix in verbs and verbal derivatives, and some of the words thus formed are among the earliest which were adopted in English, the immediate source being OF. To these and later adoptions from French belong many of the commonest words beginning with re-, as rebate, rebound, rebuke, rebut, recoil, redress, refresh, regain, regard, regret, remark, etc.

3.3 Words formed with the prefix re- first make their appearance in English about the year 1200. In the Ancren Riwle, the first text in which such forms are prominent, there occur recluse, recoil, record, relief, religion, religious, and remission. Towards the end of the century Robert of Gloucester uses rebel, receit, release, relic, relief, remue, repent, restore, revest. In the 14th c. the stock is largely increased, especially in the writings of Langland, Chaucer, Wyclif, and Trevisa, and by the year 1400 the number in common literary use is very considerable. During the 15th c. the additions are of less importance, but about the middle of the 16th an extensive adoption of Latin forms or types begins; the French element at this time is small in comparison, though it includes some important words. Towards the end of the 16th c. re- begins to rank as an ordinary English prefix, chiefly employed with words of Latin origin, but also freely prefixed to native verbs, a practice rare before this period, though Wyclif, Trevisa, and others have renew (after L. renovāre). Such formations, however, are common in Elizabethan writers: Shakespeare has recall, regreet (frequent), relive, requicken, resend, respeak, restem, retell (thrice), and reword, and many others occur in contemporary literature, as rebuild, recast, refind, reflow, regather, etc. Since 1600 the use of the prefix has been very extensive, though the number of individual formations appears to have been smaller in the 18th century than in the 17th and 19th.    The rapidly increasing use of re- in the early part of the 17th c. is strongly marked in the dictionaries of Florio and Cotgrave, both of whom freely invent forms with this prefix to render Italian or French words which begin with it. Many of these reappear at a later date, and most of them might be formed again at any time: the following may be quoted as specimens of those which have obtained little or no currency in later writers.“

--Barry


On 30 Dec 2018, at 12:58, Gillian Densmore wrote:

While reading a book last night talking about some characters relaxing.
I've always been curious. If Re: is to do again. then what was laxing
supposed to be?
Many people on this and the wed-tech list are REtired. So do you get Tired
again then quit being a worker ?
I seriously get these kind of words.
Any guesses where they came from?
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FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com
archives back to 2003: http://friam.471366.n2.nabble.com/
FRIAM-COMIC http://friam-comic.blogspot.com/ by Dr. Strangelove

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