MISS vs OMIT: NOUN
- A failure to hit or make contact with something.
- A failure to be successful.
- The misfiring of an engine.
- A young woman
- Used as a courtesy title before the surname or full name of a girl or single woman.
- A series of clothing sizes for women and girls of average height and proportions.
- Mistress: a reduced form of this title, which, so reduced, came to be regarded, when prefixed to the name of a young woman or girl, as a sort of diminutive, and was especially applied to young girls (corresponding to master as applied to young boys), older unmarried girls or women being styled mistress even in the lifetime of the mother; later, and in present use, a title prefixed to the name of any unmarried woman or girl.
- Of mission, missionary.
- Of Mississippi;
- An abbreviation
- In the game of loo, an extra hand dealt out, for which the players in turn have the option of exchanging their own.
- Loss; want; hence, a feeling of loss.
- Hurt or harm from mistake or accident.
- Error; fault; misdeed; wrong-doing; sin.
- A failure to find, reach, catch, hit, grasp, obtain, or attain; want of success.
- A failure to hit (or meet or find etc)
- Used in informal titles for a young woman to indicate the epitomizing of an attribute or activity.
- A young unmarried woman.
- Used as a form of polite address for a girl or young woman.
- Specifically, in printing, a failure on the part of the person feeding the blank sheets to a press to supply a sheet at the right moment for impression.
- N/A
MISS vs OMIT: VERB
- Leave undone or leave out
- Fail to reach or get to
- Feel or suffer from the lack of
- Fail to reach
- Fail to experience
- Be absent
- Be without
- Fail to attend an event or activity
- Fail to perceive or to catch with the senses or the mind
- Prevent from being included or considered or accepted
- Leave undone or leave out
- To leave out or exclude.
- To fail to perform.
- To neglect or take no notice of.
MISS vs OMIT: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To fail to hit, reach, catch, or otherwise make contact with.
- To be too late for or fail to meet (a train, for example).
- To fail to perceive, experience, or understand.
- To misfire, as an internal-combustion engine.
- To be unsuccessful; fail.
- To fail to accomplish or achieve.
- To fail to attend or perform.
- To fail to answer correctly.
- To fail to benefit from; let slip.
- To escape or avoid.
- To discover the absence or loss of.
- To be without; lack.
- To feel the lack or loss of.
- To fail to hit or otherwise make contact with something.
- N/A
MISS vs OMIT: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To fail or neglect to do (something).
- To forbear or fail to perform or to make use of; to leave undone; to neglect; to pass over.
- To let go; to leave unmentioned; not to insert or name; to drop.
- To fail to include or mention; leave out.
MISS vs OMIT: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To fall short; fail in observation or attainment: with of or in.
- To go astray; go wrong; slip; fall.
- To lack; be deprived of.
- To do without; dispense with; spare.
- To omit; leave out; skip, as a word in reciting or a note in singing.
- To escape; succeed in avoiding.
- A young female
- A form of address for an unmarried woman
- To fail to note, perceive, or observe; overlook or disregard: as, to miss the best points of a play.
- To fail of success or effect; miscarry; fail to hit the mark, as in shooting, playing certain games, etc.
- To fail to find, get, or keep; come short of having or receiving; fail to obtain or enjoy: as, to miss the way or one's footing; to miss a meal or an appointment.
- To fail or come short of, as from lack of capacity or opportunity; fail to be, find, attain to, or accomplish (what one might or should have been, found, attained to, or accomplished): as, he just missed being a poet; you have missed your true vocation.
- To fail to reach or attain; come short of, or go aside or deviate from, as what is aimed at, expected, or desired; fail to hit, catch, or grasp: as, to miss the mark.
- To become aware of the loss or absence of; find to be lacking; note or deplore the absence of; feel the want or need of: as, to miss one's watch or purse; to miss the comforts of home; to miss the prattle of a child.
- (idiom) (miss fire) To fail to discharge. Used of a firearm.
- (idiom) (miss fire) To fail to achieve the anticipated result.
- (idiom) (miss out on) To lose a chance for.
- (idiom) (miss the boat) To fail to avail oneself of an opportunity.
- (idiom) (miss the boat) To fail to understand.
- To fail to use or to do; neglect; disregard: as, to omit a duty; to omit to lock the door.
- To fail, forbear, or neglect to mention or speak of; leave out; say nothing of.
- To leave out; forbear or fail to insert or include: as, to omit an item from a list.
MISS vs OMIT: RELATED WORDS
- Overleap, Missfire, Leave out, Fille, Missy, Girl, Young lady, Escape, Neglect, Young woman, Lack, Drop, Omit, Overlook, Lose
- Skip, Elide, Delete, Ignore, Omission, Overleap, Leave out, Leave off, Take out, Neglect, Except, Drop, Miss, Overlook, Exclude
MISS vs OMIT: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Squander, Ignore, Forget, Skip, Leave out, Fille, Missy, Girl, Escape, Neglect, Young woman, Lack, Omit, Overlook, Lose
- Avoid, Waive, Dismiss, Eliminate, Remove, Skip, Elide, Delete, Ignore, Leave out, Neglect, Except, Miss, Overlook, Exclude
MISS vs OMIT: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Take this miss you box as a DIY Gifts for Boyfriend that surely describe how much you love and miss him without much hassle.
- Trunchbull bullies Miss Honey out of her inheritance and wages, forcing Miss Honey to live in a shack and eat almost nothing.
- Each time you miss a question, you loose one free miss.
- Pitterpatter, Miss Shushermush, and Miss Meekerton, things begin to change.
- Narrowly beat out Miss Japan, Miss Brazil, etc.
- My little kids miss you, I miss you and mommy and daddy miss you.
- Ole Miss Cup, Ole Miss Football, and Ole Miss Mini Helmet on top also.
- Miss Honey, but Miss Honey is ruled over by the principal, Miss Trunchbull.
- She also held the titles of Miss Roton Point, Miss Democracy, Miss WELI, and many others.
- Miss Belle Freeman, Miss Jennie Vernon, Miss Herron, Miss Ella Kendle, Mrs.
- Agreements without legal review often omit important provisions.
- DFc omit map and was refined with Phenix.
- Never omit that step, it is not optional.
- Why did you choose to omit this information?
- Omit or reschedule some of your other obligations.
- Omit publisher name if same as the author.
- Include hyphens but omit spaces and special characters.
- Omit a noopinion choice when asking for attitude.
- Omit Schema Qualifiers did not omit schema for foreign keys.
- You can omit whatever fields you choose to omit, probably space depending.
MISS vs OMIT: QUESTIONS
- Is Miss Slovenia out of Miss Universe due to paralysis?
- Should Africa have a Miss World or Miss Universe pageant?
- Who was the Miss Bahamas 2001 titleholder for Miss World?
- Did Steve Harvey announce Miss Colombia instead of Miss Philippines?
- Is Miss Tourism Zimbabwe allowed to compete at Miss Universe?
- How many times has Miss Missouri produced a Miss America?
- Does Miss Namibia send a delegate to Miss World 2021?
- Was there a Miss America Miss Oklahoma named Carol?
- When will Miss Colorado compete for Miss America 2022?
- Why Miss Philippines wore red at the Miss Universe?
- When to omit empty parenthesis from a method in Java?
- Can I omit an object qualifier when referencing a form?
- What happens if you omit the format model in Oracle?
- What are the select/omit specifications for logical file records?
- How does the system treat select and omit comparison statements?
- Is it possible to omit page separators in tesseract?
- When to omit the return keyword in lambda expressions?
- Do translators of Modern Literal translations intentionally omit words?
- Can enums with multiple declarations omit an initializer?
- Can controllers omit the departure control frequency?