Los Angeles |
a seaport in southern California. |
lose |
to no longer possess; be unable to find; misplace. [10 definitions] |
lose one's balance |
to become unstable or fall. |
lose one's cookies |
(slang) to throw up; vomit. |
lose one's shirt |
(informal) to lose all that one owns. |
lose one's touch |
to lose one's special ability to do something. |
loser |
a person or group that loses. [2 definitions] |
lose track of |
to lose the knowledge of where (someone or something) is, or to lose the ability to know about (someone or something). |
losing |
characterized by or experiencing loss or defeat. [4 definitions] |
loss |
a defeat or failure to win. [6 definitions] |
loss leader |
a popular commodity that a retail store sells at or below its wholesale cost in order to attract customers to buy other goods at regular prices. |
lossless |
combined form of loss. |
lost |
not able to be found or no longer possessed. [6 definitions] |
lost and found |
an office or department in a public place where lost property is held until it is claimed or disposed of. |
lost cause |
an undertaking or cause that has failed or is certain to fail. |
lost in the shuffle |
disregarded, ignored, or misplaced in the general confusion. |
lost property |
(chiefly British) personal items that have been lost by their owners in a public place and found by others. [2 definitions] |
lost tribes |
the ten tribes of ancient Israel that were taken into captivity in Assyria and apparently never returned. |
Lot |
according to the Old Testament, the nephew of Abraham who was allowed to flee from the destruction of Sodom, but whose wife was turned into a pillar of salt for looking back at the city. |
lot |
a large amount or number. [8 definitions] |
Lothario |
in the early eighteenth-century play The Fair Penitent by Nicholas Rowe, a young rake. [2 definitions] |