Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun The act or an instance of losing.
- noun One that is lost.
- noun The condition of being deprived or bereaved of something or someone.
- noun The amount of something lost.
- noun The harm or suffering caused by losing or being lost.
- noun People lost in wartime; casualties.
- noun Destruction.
- noun Electricity The power decrease caused by resistance in a circuit, circuit element, or device.
- noun The amount of a claim on an insurer by an insured.
- idiom (at a loss) Below cost.
- idiom (at a loss) Perplexed; puzzled.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun Failure to hold, keep, or preserve what one has had in his possession; disappearance from possession, use, or knowledge; deprivation of that which one has had: as, the loss of money by gaming; loss of health or reputation; loss of children: opposed to gain.
- noun Specifically, death.
- noun Failure to gain or win: as, the loss of a prize or battle.
- noun That which is lost or forfeited; that which has been scattered or wasted: as, the loss by leakage amounted to 20 gallons; an insurance company's loss by a fire.
- noun Defeat; overthrow; ruin.
- noun Lack; want.
- noun The state of being at fault; the state of having lost the trail and scent of game.
- noun At such a price as to lose or incur loss.
- noun To sustain a loss with spirit or fortitude.
- noun Synonyms Loss, Detriment, Damage, Waste, Forfeiture, etc. Loss is the class word under which detriment, damage, waste, forfeiture, etc., are species. Loss, detriment, and damage apply to persons or things; waste and forfeiture only to things. As to detriment and damage, see
injury. Waste is generally voluntary, although not always realized; sometimes it is only by neglect. Forfeiture is a loss through the law, as a penalty or as the result of neglect. - noun See
loess .
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun The act of losing; failure; destruction; privation
- noun The state of losing or having lost; the privation, defect, misfortune, harm, etc., which ensues from losing.
- noun That which is lost or from which one has parted; waste; -- opposed to
gain orincrease . - noun The state of being lost or destroyed; especially, the wreck or foundering of a ship or other vessel.
- noun Failure to gain or win.
- noun Failure to use advantageously.
- noun (Mil.) Killed, wounded, and captured persons, or captured property.
- noun (Insurance) Destruction or diminution of value, if brought about in a manner provided for in the insurance contract (as destruction by fire or wreck, damage by water or smoke), or the death or injury of an insured person; also, the sum paid or payable therefor.
- noun to make a loss good; also, to sustain a loss without sinking under it.
- noun to be in a state of uncertainty.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun an
instance oflosing , such as adefeat - noun something that is
lost - noun the hurtful
condition of having lost something or someone - noun plural
casualties , especially physically eliminated victims of violent conflict - noun financial the
sum an entity loses on balance - noun destruction,
ruin - noun engineering electricity of kinetic
power expended without doing useful work
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun the act of losing someone or something
- noun the disadvantage that results from losing something
- noun something that is lost
- noun gradual decline in amount or activity
- noun the amount by which the cost of a business exceeds its revenue
- noun euphemistic expressions for death
- noun the experience of losing a loved one
- noun military personnel lost by death or capture
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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The loss of his time was the _master's loss_, and _not_ the servant's.
The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Part 1 of 4 American Anti-Slavery Society
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The loss of his time was the _master's loss_, and _not_ the servant's.
The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus American Anti-Slavery Society
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II. iv.90 (57,2) [But in the loss of question,] The _loss_ of question I do not well understand, and should rather read,
Notes to Shakespeare — Volume 01: Comedies Samuel Johnson 1746
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I shall count my country _lost_, in the loss of the primitive _principles_, and the primitive _practices_, upon which it was at first established: but certainly one good way to save that _loss_, would be to do something, that the memory of _the great things done for us by our God_, may not be _lost_, and that the story of the circumstances attending the _foundation_ and _formation_ of this country, and of its _preservation_ hitherto, may be impartially handed unto posterity.
Choice Specimens of American Literature, and Literary Reader Being Selections from the Chief American Writers Benj. N. Martin
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and finish with the exquisite close to the loss of Proserpine, the loss which cost Ceres all that pain
The Study of Poetry 1909
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Captain Layman has served with me in three ships, and I am well acquainted with his bravery, zeal, judgment, and activity; _nor do I regret the loss of the Raven compared to the value of Captain Layman's services, which are a national loss_. [
The Life of Nelson, Volume 2 (of 2) The Embodiment of the Sea Power of Great Britain 1877
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The company said the loss is due to a combination of likely weak domestic business and a one-time loss from the withdrawal from its Cabin domestic clothing brand business, which posted a special loss of 3 billion yen.
Fast Retailing Expects Profit Drop Ayai Tomisawa 2010
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The term loss leader is thrown about with regards supermarkets yet Wetherspoons gets not a mention for undercutting locals.
Yep its cunt of the year time: Tim Marin head of J D Wetherspoon. FIDO The Dog 2009
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Following his title loss to former welterweight champion Matt Hughes, he came back to destroy Jens Pulver.
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Following his title loss to former welterweight champion Matt Hughes, he came back to destroy Jens Pulver.
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