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.n. The act of losing; loss.A Middle English form of loose.n. Praise; fame; reputation; credit.n. Report; news; gossip.To praise.