LOSER vs DEFEAT: NOUN
- Someone that has lost weight. (a recent term, originally from Kelloggs, but now has come from NBC show "The Biggest Loser")
- A contemptible or unfashionable person.
- A person of unhappy circumstances.
- Someone with bad luck or poor skills who consistently loses.
- Someone who loses in a specified manner.
- A person who fails to win.
- A plan or strategy unlikely to succeed.
- A person who is habitually unsuccessful at some endeavor, such as employment or personal relationships.
- One who loses.
- One who loses, or is subjected to loss; one who fails to win, gain, or keep.
- One that is bad in quality.
- One that loses opportunities or advantages.
- A person who is unable to be successful on a sustained basis.
- A person who takes loss in a specified way.
- One that fails to win.
- A person with a record of failing; someone who loses consistently
- A contestant who loses the contest
- Something of poor quality.
- A gambler who loses a bet
- An unsuccessful ending
- The feeling that accompanies an experience of being thwarted in attaining your goals
- The act of defeating or being defeated.
- An overthrow, as of an army in battle; loss of a battle; repulse suffered; discomfiture; -- opposed to victory.
- Frustration by rendering null and void, or by prevention of success.
- An undoing or annulling; destruction.
- The act or result of overcoming in a contest, viewed with reference to the person overcome; overthrow; vanquishment; rout: as, to inflict a severe defeat upon the enemy.
- The act of depriving a person of something expected, desired, or striven for, by some antagonistic action or influence.
- An unsuccessful ending to a struggle or contest
- An undoing; ruin; destruction.
- The act of making null and void.
- The act of overcoming or frustrating the enforcement of.
- A coming to naught; frustration.
- The state of being defeated; failure to win.
- The act of defeating an opponent.
- In law, the act of annulling, or of rendering null and void; annulment: as, the defeat of a title.
LOSER vs DEFEAT: VERB
- N/A
- Win a victory over
- Thwart the passage of
- To overcome in battle or contest.
- To nullify; to reduce, to nothing, the strength of.
LOSER vs DEFEAT: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To frustrate the enforcement of (a motion, for example).
- To prevent the success of; thwart.
- To do better than (another) in a competition or battle; win victory over; beat.
- To resist with success.
- To overcome or vanquish, as an army; to check, disperse, or ruin by victory; to overthrow.
- To render null and void, as a title; to frustrate, as hope; to deprive, as of an estate.
- To undo; to disfigure; to destroy.
- To dishearten or dispirit.
- To be beyond the comprehension of; mystify.
- To make (an estate, for example) void; annul.
LOSER vs DEFEAT: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Someone who loses consistently
- A person with a record of failing
- To undo; do away with; deprive of vigor, prosperity, health, life, or value; ruin; destroy.
- [In the last extract there is perhaps an allusion to defeature, 2.]
- Specifically In law, to annul; render null and void: as, to defeat a title to an estate. See defeasance, 3.
- To deprive of something expected, desired, or striven for, by some antagonistic action or influence: applied to persons.
- To frustrate; prevent the success of; make of no effect; thwart: applied to things.
- To overcome in a contest of any kind, as a battle, fight, game, debate, competition, or election; vanquish; conquer; overthrow; rout; beat: as, to defeat an army; to defeat an opposing candidate; to defeat one's opponent at chess.
- Synonyms Beat, Overpower, Overwhelm, Defeat, Discomfit, Rout, Overthrow, conquer. Beat is a general, somewhat indefinite, but vigorous word, covering the others. Overpower and overwhelm are the least discreditable to the one that loses in the struggle; overpower is least permanent in its effects. To overpower is to overcome by superiority of strength or numbers, but the disadvantage may be changed by the arrival of reinforcements. To overwhelm is to bear down utterly, to sweep clear away by superior strength. Defeat is to overcome or get the better of in some kind of contest, and implies less discredit, but generally greater disaster, to the defeated party than beat: as, that army is considered beaten which withdraws from the field. Defeat implies a serious disadvantage, because it applies more often to large numbers engaged. Discomfit has fallen into comparative disuse, except in its secondary sense of foiling, etc.; in that it expresses a comparatively complete and mortifying defeat. Rout is to defeat and drive off the field in confusion. Overthrow is the most decisive and final of these words; it naturally applies only to great persons, concerns, armies, etc. See conquer.
LOSER vs DEFEAT: RELATED WORDS
- Lost, Loss, Dork, Moron, Defeat, Lose, Gambler, Dud, Losing, Chump, Underdog, Also ran, Unsuccessful person, Nonstarter, Failure
- Losing, Beat, Trounce, Loss, Rout, Setback, Win, Triumph, Victory, Vote down, Vote out, Kill, Licking, Frustration, Overcome
LOSER vs DEFEAT: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Nerd, Beat, Idiot, Lost, Loss, Dork, Moron, Defeat, Lose, Dud, Losing, Chump, Underdog, Nonstarter, Failure
- Humiliation, Losing, Beat, Trounce, Loss, Rout, Setback, Win, Triumph, Victory, Vote down, Kill, Licking, Frustration, Overcome
LOSER vs DEFEAT: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Top loser of the week was Margaret Humes.
- Odelay, or is Loser the only worthwhile nugget?
- BTW, that bank officer is a fag loser.
- Unfortunately, every contest there must have a loser.
- The notice of entry tells the loser the date the judgment was entered and tells the loser that the time to appeal has started.
- Let's face it, Clinton is a poor loser, and she is backed by another poor loser, her husband, Bill.
- Between the biggest loser spreadsheet is good use the biggest loser challenge when a professional life easier.
- Game 2 loser vs. Game 3 loser, 11 a.m.
- Loser was inside, semi-conscious, but after he was pulled from the vehicle, Loser faded.
- This is like watching "The biggest loser" Loser after loser speaking.
- You will in effect defeat their screwy system.
- Do not attempt to defeat this safety feature.
- Thus, the Nazis are able to defeat the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union, while Japan is able to defeat the United States.
- To defeat them, hit the question switch to change their colors, then defeat them to get the trophy.
- The vanquished was buried in history, only to be remembered as a lesson to posterity, his defeat considered the defeat of his unjust cause.
- Besides, humans share a recent common ancestor with gorillas, and conceding defeat for the silverback gorilla would mean conceding defeat for all of humanity.
- Security against defeat implies defensive tactics; ability to defeat the enemy means taking the offensive.
- Must defeat empress of light during day time, to defeat her avoid getting hit as she will one shot anyone.
- The defeat of healthcare was a huge defeat.
- Many of our generals met defeat after defeat.
LOSER vs DEFEAT: QUESTIONS
- What does a typical Biggest Loser spreadsheet look like?
- What happened to Nicole from Biggest Loser Season 7?
- What happened to Adro from the Biggest Loser Australia?
- What happened to Burgandy and Elizabeth on Biggest Loser?
- What happened to Ruben Studdard from the Biggest Loser?
- Does 'The Biggest Loser' help or hurt your metabolism?
- How long has the loser boyfriend parented my daughter?
- Do Biggest Loser contestants regain weight after Season 8?
- What happened to Toma Dobrosavljevic on Biggest Loser?
- Where are your favorite 'Biggest Loser' winners now?
- Could Ronan defeat Thanos without the Infinity Gem?
- What happens to Gaspard after you defeat florianne?
- How did Fidel Castro defeat the Batista government?
- Which two empires did Chandragupta defeat and conquer?
- Did Russia invade Afghanistan to defeat terrorists?
- How to defeat biometric finger scanning technology?
- Why are Shrewsbury investigating after Anfield defeat?
- How did Cuauhtemoc defeat the Spanish conquistadors?
- Did Chandragupta Maurya defeat Alexander the Great?
- Does religious disagreement defeat secular beliefs?