How to Use laggard in a Sentence

laggard

noun
  • The company has been a laggard in developing new products.
  • Transports were the leader and is now the laggard since the week of May 14.
    Richard Henry Suttmeier, Forbes, 13 June 2021
  • AmerisourceBergen, the laggard among the three this year, may come out on top next year.
    David Wainer, WSJ, 28 Dec. 2022
  • Apple claims the battery on the 11 Pro lasts four hours longer than last year’s laggard iPhone XS.
    Geoffrey A. Fowler, The Denver Post, 15 Sep. 2019
  • How much did the winners contribute to bail out the eight laggards?
    Shawn Tully, Fortune, 28 Feb. 2024
  • To get down to one laggard, well, that’s huge progress in the club’s 17th year of tracking high-powered women.
    BostonGlobe.com, 7 Nov. 2019
  • To this point, gold has been the laggard in asset class performance (still down year-to-date).
    Bryan Rich, Forbes, 18 May 2021
  • Its industry has been struggling and the stock has been a laggard.
    John Dorfman, Forbes, 21 Feb. 2024
  • Among the laggards, Netflix fell 5.9% and Hasbro dropped 1.5%.
    San Diego Union-Tribune, 20 Sep. 2019
  • But the state has been something of a laggard in sports betting, which has been spreading across the country.
    Dallas News, 23 Sep. 2022
  • The major indexes are mixed, with Japan's Nikkei the laggard, down 1.4%.
    Bernhard Warner, Fortune, 28 Aug. 2020
  • Tech stocks again were the big laggard on Tuesday with the Nasdaq falling for a second straight day.
    Bernhard Warner, Fortune, 24 Nov. 2021
  • Even by that standard, though, Castillo Armas was a bit of a laggard.
    Jonathan Blitzer, The New Yorker, 24 Nov. 2021
  • The state has been a laggard; only 47% of residents have received at least one dose of the vaccine.
    BostonGlobe.com, 17 Aug. 2021
  • But in the last decade, the company has gone from an industry leader to a laggard.
    Niraj Chokshi, New York Times, 2 Apr. 2023
  • France is next, while Spain and Italy are persistent laggards.
    The Economist, 4 Dec. 2019
  • In the years leading up to the war, Ukraine, long a laggard in greening its power grid, had begun making progress.
    Evan Halper, Washington Post, 9 Mar. 2023
  • That means selling some of the best-performing assets, buying some of the laggards, or both.
    WSJ, 7 Feb. 2020
  • This is incredible progress at a time when there is no place for laggards in the race to decarbonize.
    María Mendiluce, Forbes, 29 Feb. 2024
  • Paramount, for one, has been a laggard in theatrical box-office share -- at 5% year to date, per Boxofficemojo.com.
    Brian Lowry, CNN, 13 Aug. 2019
  • Toyota has been seen as a laggard in fully electric cars.
    Peter Valdes-Dapena, CNN, 16 Nov. 2022
  • But the stock is still a significant laggard relative to peers and the broader market over the longer term.
    Dan Gallagher, WSJ, 12 Mar. 2021
  • Meanwhile, the laggard groups of 2023, such as energy and financials, are leading the gains in June.
    Michael Msika, Bloomberg.com, 8 June 2023
  • Over the past decade, Maryland’s public schools have gone in the wrong direction — from a leader to a laggard on the Nation’s Report Card.
    Clarence C. Crawford, Baltimore Sun, 25 Jan. 2024
  • Early in the coronavirus crisis, the US was a testing laggard.
    Timothy B. Lee, Ars Technica, 15 May 2020
  • The major Asia indexes are mixed in afternoon trading with the Hang Seng, yesterday's laggard, the best of the bunch, up 0.7%.
    Bernhard Warner, Fortune, 4 May 2021
  • Britain is a laggard in fibre, which allows much higher speeds than copper wires.
    The Economist, 22 Nov. 2019
  • For laggard industry stocks that do not fit the ESG, growth, meme mold to shine since the election is a good sign that the economy’s improvement is broad-based.
    John S. Tobey, Forbes, 19 Apr. 2021
  • The materials and health care sectors were the only laggards.
    BostonGlobe.com, 22 Oct. 2019
  • The Nikkei, an October laggard, is up 2.6%; Chinese stocks are sinking.
    Bernhard Warner, Fortune, 1 Nov. 2021

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'laggard.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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