In a two-horse race there is always one winner and one loser.
n An unexpectedly bad situation, program, programmer, or person Someone who habitually loses (Even winners can lose occasionally ) Someone who knows not and knows not that he knows not Emphatic forms are `real loser', `total loser', and `complete loser' (but not *`moby loser', which would be a contradiction in terms) See {luser}
Someone that has lost weight. (a recent term, originally from Kelloggs, but now has come from NBC show "The Biggest Loser")"
a card which is not likely to win a trick Generally, a non-Ace outside of Trump is a loser
disapproval If you refer to someone as a loser, you have a low opinion of them because you think they are always unsuccessful. They've only been trained to compete with other men, so a successful woman can make them feel like a real loser. = failure
People who are losers as the result of an action or event, are in a worse situation because of it or do not benefit from it. Some of Britain's top business leaders of the 1980s became the country's greatest losers in the recession. winner