MISSES vs LOSE: NOUN
- Plural form of miss.
- Alternative spelling of missus. (Mrs)
- A failure to hit (or meet or find etc)
- A young woman
- The act of losing; loss.
MISSES vs LOSE: VERB
- Fail to perceive or to catch with the senses or the mind
- Fail to attend an event or activity
- Be without
- Be absent
- Fail to experience
- Fail to reach
- Feel or suffer from the lack of
- Fail to reach or get to
- Leave undone or leave out
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of miss.
- Allow to go out of sight
- Miss from one's possessions; lose sight of
- Fail to keep or to maintain; cease to have, either physically or in an abstract sense
- Fail to get or obtain
- Fail to make money in a business; make a loss or fail to profit
- Fail to win
- Suffer the loss of a person through death or removal
- Fail to perceive or to catch with the senses or the mind
- Retreat
- Be set at a disadvantage
- Place (something) where one cannot find it again
MISSES vs LOSE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To be unsuccessful in retaining possession of; mislay.
- To consume aimlessly; waste.
- To be deprived of (something one has had).
- To be left alone or desolate because of the death of.
- To be unable to keep alive.
- To be unable to keep control or allegiance of.
- To fail to win; fail in.
- To fail to use or take advantage of.
- To fail to hear, see, or understand.
- To let (oneself) become unable to find the way.
- To remove (oneself), as from everyday reality into a fantasy world.
- To rid oneself of.
- To wander from or become ignorant of.
- To elude or outdistance.
- To be outdistanced by.
- To become slow by (a specified amount of time). Used of a timepiece.
- To cause or result in the loss of.
- To cause to be destroyed. Usually used in the passive.
- To cause to be damned.
- To suffer loss.
- To be defeated.
- To operate or run slow. Used of a timepiece.
MISSES vs LOSE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- N/A
- A Middle English form of loose.
- To praise.
- To miss from present possession or knowledge; part with or be parted from by misadventure; fail to keep, as something that one owns, or is in charge of or concerned for, or would keep.
- To be dispossessed, deprived, or bereaved of; be prevented or debarred from keeping, holding, or retaining; be parted from without wish or consent: as, to lose money by speculation; to lose blood by a wound; to lose one's hair by sickness; to lose a friend by death.
- To cease to have; part with through change of condition or relations; be rid of or disengaged from.
- To fail to preserve or maintain: as, to lose one's reputation or reason; to lose credit.
- To fail to gain or win; fail to grasp or secure; miss; let slip: as, to lose an opportunity; to lose a prize, a game, or a battle.
- To let slip or escape from observation, perception, etc.: as, I lost what he was saying, from inattention; we lost the ship in the fog.
- To fail to profit by; miss the use, advantage, or enjoyment of; waste.
- To cause to miss or be deprived of; subject to the loss of: as, his slowness lost him the chance.
- To displace, dislodge, or expel.
- To give over to ruin, disgrace, or shame: chiefly in the past participle.
- To be bewildered; have the thoughts or reason hopelessly perplexed or confused.
- To become abstracted or fall into a reverie; become absorbed in thought; lose consciousness, as in slumber.
- To suffer loss or deprivation.
- To incur forfeit in a contest; fail to win.
- To succumb; fail; suffer by comparison.
- Allow to go out of sight or mind
- Withdraw, as from reality
- Fail to keep or to maintain
- Miss from one's possessions
- Lose sight of
- Fail to make money in a business
- Make a loss or fail to profit
- (idiom) (lose it) To become very angry or emotionally upset.
- (idiom) (lose it) To become deranged or mentally disturbed.
- (idiom) (lose it) To become less capable or proficient; decline.
- (idiom) (lose out on) To miss (an opportunity, for example).
- (idiom) (lose time) To delay advancement.
- (idiom) (lose time) To operate too slowly. Used of a timepiece.
MISSES vs LOSE: RELATED WORDS
- Missfire, Overleap, Leave out, Fille, Missy, Girl, Young lady, Escape, Neglect, Young woman, Lack, Drop, Omit, Overlook, Lose
- Cede, Forfeited, Loss, Retain, Disappear, Deprive, Suffer, Squander, Fall back, Drop off, Fall behind, Recede, Mislay, Misplace, Miss
MISSES vs LOSE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Lacks, Forget, Eludes, Ignores, Leave out, Fille, Missy, Girl, Escape, Neglect, Young woman, Lack, Omit, Overlook, Lose
- Forfeit, Forfeited, Loss, Retain, Disappear, Deprive, Suffer, Squander, Fall back, Drop off, Fall behind, Recede, Mislay, Misplace, Miss
MISSES vs LOSE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- LLC misses rate and ratio are quite low.
- DMM movement about rapidity, it just misses entirely.
- Brett swings at, but misses, the first one.
- Have they reported accidents or any near misses?
- You only hear about the hits and never hear about the misses even though the misses far outnumber the hits.
- This can be both beneficial, as it gets to the heart of the matter, but sometimes misses the fun as it misses the quirks.
- The assistants were assigned as follows: Misses WILDER and BOUGHTON to the High School, Misses BROWN and OAKLEY to Intermediate and Primary.
- Documenting Hazards or Near misses: The following form will be used for reporting any hazards or near misses on this jobsite.
- Month by month, small dollar misses translate into large misses in percentage terms expressed at an annual rate.
- Our Catalog header Misses mobile header Misses view all misses.
- It is obviously tragic enough to lose a breast due to cancer; it is a disaster to lose healthy breasts due to diagnostic error.
- When we lose someone, we lose them from all future moments, from all future holidays.
- Christians compromise with the world, if they lose their distinctive character, they lose their beneficial effect on the world.
- Any removed negative review is a good result: Even though you lose one review, you also lose the negative impact it causes.
- Tribes would continue to lose sales because, even with a credit, they would lose the tax advantage they were seeking.
- In other words, deliver value or you not only lose the plan participant, but you lose the client too.
- But to come out on top even if you lose, lose with grace, because you can still be a good person.
- This is a program for anyone that wants to lose weight, tone up, gain muscle or lose body fat.
- And when lizards lose their toes through evolution, they lose them in the reverse order.
- Worst case, you lose customer trust and maybe lose their business.
MISSES vs LOSE: QUESTIONS
- What can we learn from near misses of maternal deaths?
- What happens when Connor misses his curfew in the woods?
- What happens if the Canon PowerShot SX270 HS misses focus?
- How do near-misses and personal choice affect gambling behaviour?
- What happens if your GP misses the diagnosis of DVT?
- What is adverse events near misses and errors primer?
- What are throttles and misses in the interface output?
- What are the biggest near-misses in lottery history?
- Do girls jeans fit differently than juniors and misses?
- Are near misses precursors to later adverse events?
- How long do animals lose consciousness during euthanasia?
- What causes teenagers to lose motivation in school?
- Can you lose weight with vibration plate exercises?
- How did Jacqueline Jossa lose weight during lockdown?
- How does trampoline exercise help astronauts lose weight?
- Do psyclobin mushrooms lose their potency over time?
- Do abdominal sweatbands really help you lose weight?
- Do Indians lose their temper with customer service?
- Why do pediculicides lose their effectiveness quickly?
- Why are some lose-lose situations preferable to win-losing situations?