تعريف (lost) في الإنجليزية الإنجليزية القاموس.
- I lost my backpack
- Indicates that the speaker has lost his or her backpack
- I lost my bag
- Indicates that the speaker has lost his or her handbag
- I lost my bag
- Indicates that the speaker has lost his or her backpack
- I lost my glasses
- Indicates that the speaker has lost his or her glasses
- I lost my handbag
- Indicates that the speaker has lost his or her handbag
- I lost my keys
- Indicates that the speaker has lost his or her keys
- I lost my wallet
- Indicates that the speaker has lost his or her wallet
- I'm lost
- Indicates that the speaker is unable to find his or her way
- I've lost my keys
- Indicates that the speaker has lost his or her keys
- Lost Wages
- Las Vegas (city in Nevada)
- better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all
- Having experience of love, even if it ended, is better than having no experience of love
- better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all
- Love is worthwhile despite the pain involved in separation
- get lost
- To lose one's way
I got lost in his reasoning.
- get lost
- Used to tell somebody to go away or leave one alone
- get lost
- To be absent, to seem to be absent
The violins 'get lost with the rest of the music.
- long lost
- Alternative spelling of long-lost. (Something missing for a protracted length of time)
My long-lost brother showed up, borrowed money and vanished again.
- long-lost
- Having been missing or unknown for a protracted period of time
My long-lost brother showed up, borrowed money and vanished again.
- lost
- Unable to find one's way; unavailable, with location unknown
Deep beneath the ocean, the Titanic was lost to the world.
- lost
- Simple past tense and past participle of lose
- lost and found
- A department, service or location where items that are found can be claimed by their owners
Well, if you can't find your glasses then go to lost and found and ask if anyone turned them in.
- lost and founds
- plural form of lost and found
- lost cause
- A cause, attempt, or effort that is hopeless or futile
He has already made up his mind, and it's a lost cause to try to change it.
- lost count
- Simple past tense and past participle of lose count
- lost errand
- a mission likely to fail
The detective expressed his conviction that they were both on a lost errand. He was convinced that the boy would not make his appearance; although when pressed by Clive to do so, he declined to give the reasons for his conviction.
- lost errands
- plural form of lost errand
- lost face
- Simple past tense and past participle of lose face
- lost for words
- speechless because of surprise, or shock
When I saw the gift, I was lost for words.
- lost in action
- Rejected, nullified, incapacitated, or rendered unavailable
The President will continue to push for his legislation, but White House officials recognize that, with the election approaching, it won't get any easier.
- lost in action
- Destroyed during military combat
Summing up the furious October 22-27 battle in the longest Naval communique of the war, the department identified six American ships lost in action.
- lost in action
- Killed during military combat
Kouchner's comments came after another French marine was killed bringing to 29 the number of French forces lost in action.
- lost in thought
- Being preoccupied with one's thoughts rather than paying attention to reality
These lines the knight perus'd, and, lost in thought, / He long in vain the secret meaning sought.
- lost it
- Simple past tense and past participle of lose it
- lost properties
- plural form of lost property
- lost property
- Property that is found in such a state as to make it likely that the original owner unintentionally ceased to be in possession of the property, and would be unable to locate the property
- lost property
- A help desk or department in a store, mall, or other such facility where customers who have lost an item can inquire as to whether it has been found and turned in; a lost and found
- lost sheep
- A disadvantaged or marginalized person who can be "brought back into the fold" with a little effort
- lost track
- Simple past tense and past participle of lose track
- lost wages
- Income that a plaintiff in a lawsuit would have received but for the actions of the defendant, and for which the defendant is therefore liable
- lost wax
- A method of casting a sculpture in which a model of the sculpture is made from wax; the model is used to make a mould; when the mould has set, the wax is made to melt and is poured away, leaving the mould ready to be used to cast the sculpture
- lost weekend
- A period of several days in which one indulges in activities such as binge drinking, drug-taking and sex
- lost with all hands
- destroyed or sunk, while all passengers and crew died
- no love lost
- dislike, animosity
There was no love lost between the two opponents.
- one who hesitates is lost
- A person who spends too much time contemplating what to do may miss a valuable but fleeting opportunity
- lost
- {a} no longer perceptible, gone, perished
- lost cause
- (deyim) Someone or something that has no chance of succeeding:
I used to try to get him to do some exercise but then decided he was a lost cause.
- no love lost
- Bad feeling; ill will. "Bob and Dick both wanted to be elected captain of the team, and there was no love lost between them.", "There was no love lost between the sales and the accounting departments."
- you lost me
- (deyim) "You lost me" means that you do not understand what the speaker is saying. It's usually used when someone is explaining something very complicated and the listener gets confused
- Lost River Range
- A chain of mountains in east-central Idaho rising to 3,861.9 m (12,662 ft) at Borah Peak, the highest elevation in the state
- Raiders of the Lost Ark
- 1981 film starring Harrison Ford (directed by Steven Spielberg)
- get lost!
- {ü} get out of here! go away!
- got lost
- was misplaced; went astray, lost his way
- long-lost
- You use long-lost to describe someone or something that you have not seen for a long time. finding a long-lost sixth century manuscript. lost or not seen for a long time
- lost
- spiritually or physically doomed or destroyed; "lost souls"; "a lost generation"; "a lost ship"; "the lost platoon"
- lost
- the Force of the mystical, magical, and forgotten The source of faith and magic, and the governing Force for esoteric occult knowledges Governed by Saturn, the Mystic
- lost
- people who are destined to die soon; "the agony of the doomed was in his voice"
- lost
- incapable of being recovered or regained; "his lost honor
- lost
- not gained or won; "a lost battle"; "a lost prize"
- lost
- Having wandered from, or unable to find, the way; bewildered; perplexed; as, a child lost in the woods; a stranger lost in London
- lost
- You use lost to refer to a period or state of affairs that existed in the past and no longer exists. He seemed to pine for his lost youth the relics of a lost civilisation
- lost
- Not employed or enjoyed; thrown away; employed ineffectually; wasted; squandered; as, a lost day; a lost opportunity or benefit
- lost
- unable to function; without help
- lost cause
- a defeated cause or a cause for which defeat is inevitable
- lost cause
- {i} cause that cannot succeed
- lost color
- faded, became lighter in color
- lost consciousness
- lost use of his senses
- lost control
- no longer had control, lost command over (i.e. one's feelings, a situation, etc.)
- lost face
- degraded oneself, fell from grace, became disliked
- lost face with
- lost the respect of
- lost his eyesight
- became blind
- lost his head
- lost track of his thoughts and ideas
- lost his memory
- was unable to remember
- lost his patience
- lost his tolerance, his patience lapsed
- lost his right
- lost his privilege, had his right taken from him, was no longer entitled
- lost his senses
- lost his self control, lost the ability to think rationally
- lost his temper
- became angry, lost his self control
- lost his way
- went astray, got lost, took a wrong turn
- lost in thought
- preoccupied, meditating, deeply engrossed in thought
- lost labor
- wasted effort, work that was done but did not bring results
- lost property
- Lost property is a place where lost property is kept. I was enquiring in Lost Property at Derby
- lost sleep over
- worried over, didn't sleep well due to worrying
- lost soul
- pitiful person, misguided person
- lost the ball
- did not succeed in controlling the ball
- lost time
- The time during a given phase in which traffic could be discharging through the intersection, but is not This is the period during the green interval and change intervals that is not used by discharging traffic
- restoration of lost property
- giving back of lost possessions to the owners
- the lost son
- someone who has been cut off from his family and origins, someone who is disconnected from their place of origin