The past tense of the verb to lose is lost.
The rarely-used verb to loose (let loose) would have the past tense or participle loosed, but would more often still be "let loose" in the past tense.
The spelling "lose" means to misplace, or to be defeated.
The similar word loose is an adjective meaning not tight.
If you say it like " this team loses, and this team wins", then you would spell it l-o-o-s-e-s, other known as looses.......
That is the correct spelling of "lose you" (e.g. as a friend, girlfriend, spouse).
Losing
Loss
13,000 Union loses 5,000 CSA loses in total 18000
when he loses his army
5
you spell it lose
PHILADELPHIA
Lose Lost Loses
The verb to argue loses its E to form the noun "argument".
Yeah! George Weasley loses a ear cause Severus Snape Cursed it of.
During bad luck, he loses everything. Things fall out of his pockets and out of his memory: he loses pens, money, documents, names, faces, and words. He doesn't know if it is a person that put an evil spell on him or pure coincidence. He loses what he finds and doesn't find what he loses. He feels fear that he may lose his live in some distraction
Here are the two similar words: loser - (noun) one who loses looser - (adjective) not as tight, more loose
The noun "loser" means one who loses. The adjective "looser" means not as tight.
because, well mostly it's that William turns small and he turns mrs.Phillips small. then he has to go on a quest with sir Simon which he loses. but then the wizard has a magical spell he uses.
The word is spelled anorexia. It describes a condition in which a person loses weight, deliberately or because of another illness. Anorexia patients are called anorexic.
Not you my friend.... not you
Electrolytes.
When your truck loses power, the ABS system loses power.
If a coach loses a challenge of any kind, his team loses a time out.