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1 cause to lose
(v) fondi. -
2 cause to lose control
kontrolü kaybetmesine neden ol -
3 cause to lose control
kontrolü kaybetmesine neden ol -
4 lose
lose [lu:z](pt & pp lost [lɒst])(a) (gen → limb, job, money, patience etc) perdre;∎ I've lost my umbrella again j'ai encore perdu mon parapluie;∎ to lose one's way se perdre, s'égarer;∎ what have you got to lose? qu'est-ce que tu as à perdre?;∎ you've got nothing to lose tu n'as rien à perdre;∎ we haven't got a moment to lose il n'y a pas une seconde à perdre;∎ he lost no time in telling her she was wrong il ne s'est pas gêné pour lui dire qu'elle avait tort;∎ his shop is losing money son magasin perd de l'argent;∎ they are losing their markets to the Koreans ils sont en train de perdre leurs marchés au profit des Coréens;∎ we lost 80 days in strikes last year l'année dernière, nous avons perdu 80 journées de travail à cause des grèves;∎ don't talk so fast, you've lost me ne parle pas si vite, je n'arrive pas à te suivre;∎ you lost me when you started using technical terms j'ai perdu le fil quand tu as commencé à employer des termes techniques;∎ at what age did he lose his mother? à quel âge a-t-il perdu sa mère?;∎ they lost their homes in the flood ils ont perdu leur maison dans l'inondation;∎ thirty lives were lost in the fire trente personnes ont péri dans l'incendie, l'incendie a fait trente morts;∎ she lost a leg/her eyesight in an accident elle a perdu une jambe/la vue dans un accident;∎ to lose one's voice avoir une extinction de voix;∎ his work loses a lot in translation son œuvre se prête très mal à la traduction;∎ the play didn't lose much in the television version la pièce n'a pas perdu beaucoup en étant adaptée pour la télévision;∎ to lose one's appetite perdre l'appétit;∎ it made me lose my appetite ça m'a coupé l'appétit;∎ the plane is losing altitude or height l'avion perd de l'altitude;∎ to lose one's balance perdre l'équilibre;∎ to lose consciousness perdre connaissance;∎ to lose face perdre la face;∎ to lose ground perdre du terrain;∎ I've lost interest in it ça ne m'intéresse plus;∎ he lost his nerve at the last minute le courage lui a manqué au dernier moment;∎ familiar to lose one's head perdre la tête;∎ familiar to lose it (go mad) perdre la boule; (lose one's temper) piquer une crise, péter les plombs;∎ he lost four games to Karpov il a perdu quatre parties contre Karpov(c) (shed, get rid of) perdre;∎ to lose weight perdre du poids;∎ I've lost several pounds j'ai perdu plusieurs kilos;∎ the trees lose their leaves in winter les arbres perdent leurs feuilles en hiver(d) (elude, shake off) semer;∎ she managed to lose the detective elle a réussi à semer le détective(e) (cause to lose) coûter à, faire perdre à;∎ it lost him his job ça lui a fait perdre son emploi;∎ it lost us the contract cela nous a fait perdre le contrat;∎ his attitude lost him our respect à cause de son attitude, il a perdu notre estime;∎ that mistake lost him the match cette faute lui coûta la partie(f) (of clock, watch)∎ my watch loses five minutes a day ma montre prend cinq minutes de retard par jour∎ they lost by one goal ils ont perdu d'un but;∎ either way, I can't lose je suis gagnant à tous les coups;∎ the dollar is losing in value (against the deutschmark) le dollar baisse (par rapport au deutsche Mark);∎ if you sell the house now you'll lose on it si tu vends la maison maintenant tu vas perdre de l'argent;∎ I lost on the deal j'ai été perdant dans l'affaire(b) (clock, watch) retarderperdre, être perdant;∎ to lose out on a deal être perdant dans une affaire;∎ will the Americans lose out to the Japanese in computers? les Américains vont-ils perdre le marché de l'informatique au profit des Japonais? -
5 lose
lu:zpast tense, past participle - lost; verb1) (to stop having; to have no longer: She has lost interest in her work; I have lost my watch; He lost hold of the rope.) perder2) (to have taken away from one (by death, accident etc): She lost her father last year; The ship was lost in the storm; He has lost his job.) perder3) (to put (something) where it cannot be found: My secretary has lost your letter.) perder4) (not to win: I always lose at cards; She lost the race.) perder5) (to waste or use more (time) than is necessary: He lost no time in informing the police of the crime.) perder•- loser- loss
- lost
- at a loss
- a bad
- good loser
- lose oneself in
- lose one's memory
- lose out
- lost in
- lost on
lose vb perdertr[lʊːz]1 (in general) perder2 (immerse) sumergir (in, en)3 (clock) atrasar1 (in general) perder2 (clock) atrasarse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto have nothing to lose familiar no tener nada que perderto lose one's head perder la cabezato lose one's heart (to somebody) enamorarse (de alguien)to lose one's life perder la vida, perecerto lose one's way perderseto lose sight of something perder algo de vistato lose weight adelgazar, perder peso1) : perderI lost my umbrella: perdí mi paraguasto lose blood: perder sangreto lose one's voice: quedarse fónicoto have nothing to lose: no tener nada que perderto lose no time: no perder tiempoto lose weight: perder peso, adelgazarto lose one's temper: perder los estribos, enojarse, enfadarseto lose sight of: perder de vista2) : costar, hacer perderthe errors lost him his job: los errores le costaron su empleo3) : atrasarmy watch loses 5 minutes a day: mi reloj atrasa 5 minutos por día4)to lose oneself : perderse, ensimismarselose vi1) : perderwe lost to the other team: perdimos contra el otro equipo2) : atrasarsethe clock loses time: el reloj se atrasav.(§ p.,p.p.: lost) = palmar v.• perder v.luːz
1.
1) transitive verb (past & past p lost)2) ( mislay) perder*I've lost my key — he perdido or se me ha perdido la llave
to lose one's way — perderse*
3) ( be deprived of) \<\<sight/territory/right\>\> perder*4)a) ( fail to keep) \<\<customers/popularity/speed\>\> perder*we are losing our best teachers to industry — los mejores profesores se nos están yendo a trabajar a la industria
b) ( rid oneself of) \<\<inhibitions\>\> perder*to lose weight — adelgazar*, perder* peso
5)a) ( shake off) \<\<pursuer\>\> deshacerse* deb) ( lose sight of) perder* de vista6) ( confuse) confundiryou've lost me there! — no entiendo, no te sigo
7) ( cause to lose) costar*, hacer* perdertheir hesitation lost them the contract — la falta de decisión les costó or les hizo perder el contrato
8)a) ( miss) \<\<train/flight/connection\>\> perder*b) ( let pass) \<\<time/opportunity\>\> perder*9) ( fail to win) \<\<game/battle/election\>\> perder*
2.
vi1)a) ( be beaten) \<\<team/contestant/party\>\> perder*to lose TO somebody — perder* frente a alguien
b) losing pres p <team/party> perdedorto be on the losing side — ser* de los perdedores
2)a) ( suffer losses) perder*to lose on a deal — salir* perdiendo en un negocio
b) ( be less effective) perder*the poem loses in translation — el poema pierde con la traducción or al ser traducido
3) \<\<watch/clock\>\> atrasar, atrasarse
3.
v reflPhrasal Verbs:- lose out[luːz] (pt, pp lost)1. VT1) (=mislay, fail to find) perder2) (=be deprived of) perderwhat have you got to lose? — ¿qué tienes tú que perder?, ¿qué vas a perder?
he lost £1,000 on that deal — perdió 1.000 libras en ese trato
breath 1., 1), voice 1., 1)•
to lose the use of an arm — perder el uso de un brazo3) (=fail to keep) perder•
she's lost her figure/her looks — ha perdido la línea/su belleza- lose itinterest 1., 1), rag I, 1., 1), sight 1., 2), temper 1., 1)4) (=fail to win) [+ game, war, election] perder5) (=miss)to lose one's way — (lit) perderse; (fig) perder el rumbo
6) (=waste) perder•
there was not a moment to lose — no había ni un momento que perder•
I wouldn't lose any sleep over it! — ¡no pierdas el sueño por ello!, ¡no te preocupes por ello!•
to lose no time in doing sth, she lost no time in making up her mind — se decidió enseguida, no le costó nada decidirseI lost no time in telling him exactly what I thought of him — no vacilé en decirle exactamente lo que pensaba de él
7) * (=get rid of) [+ unwanted companion] deshacerse de; [+ pursuers] zafarse de•
to lose weight — perder peso, adelgazarI lost two kilos — perdí or adelgacé dos kilos
8) (=fall behind) [watch, clock] atrasarse9) (=cause loss of)it lost him the job/the match — le costó el puesto/el partido, le hizo perder el puesto/el partido
that deal lost me £5,000 — ese negocio me costó or me hizo perder 5.000 libras
10) * (=confuse) confundiryou've lost me there — ahora sí que me has confundido, ahora sí que no te entiendo
11)to lose o.s. in sth — (a book, music, memories) ensimismarse en algo
2. VI1) [player, team] perder•
you can't lose — no tienes pérdida, tienes que forzosamente salir ganando2) [watch, clock] atrasarse- lose out* * *[luːz]
1.
1) transitive verb (past & past p lost)2) ( mislay) perder*I've lost my key — he perdido or se me ha perdido la llave
to lose one's way — perderse*
3) ( be deprived of) \<\<sight/territory/right\>\> perder*4)a) ( fail to keep) \<\<customers/popularity/speed\>\> perder*we are losing our best teachers to industry — los mejores profesores se nos están yendo a trabajar a la industria
b) ( rid oneself of) \<\<inhibitions\>\> perder*to lose weight — adelgazar*, perder* peso
5)a) ( shake off) \<\<pursuer\>\> deshacerse* deb) ( lose sight of) perder* de vista6) ( confuse) confundiryou've lost me there! — no entiendo, no te sigo
7) ( cause to lose) costar*, hacer* perdertheir hesitation lost them the contract — la falta de decisión les costó or les hizo perder el contrato
8)a) ( miss) \<\<train/flight/connection\>\> perder*b) ( let pass) \<\<time/opportunity\>\> perder*9) ( fail to win) \<\<game/battle/election\>\> perder*
2.
vi1)a) ( be beaten) \<\<team/contestant/party\>\> perder*to lose TO somebody — perder* frente a alguien
b) losing pres p <team/party> perdedorto be on the losing side — ser* de los perdedores
2)a) ( suffer losses) perder*to lose on a deal — salir* perdiendo en un negocio
b) ( be less effective) perder*the poem loses in translation — el poema pierde con la traducción or al ser traducido
3) \<\<watch/clock\>\> atrasar, atrasarse
3.
v reflPhrasal Verbs:- lose out -
6 lose
lose [lu:z](preterite, past participle lost)a. perdre• don't lose any sleep over it! ne vous en faites pas !• he's lost his licence ( = been disqualified from driving) on lui a retiré son permis de conduire• to lose ten minutes a day [watch, clock] retarder de dix minutes par jour► to get lost [person] se perdreb. ( = make redundant) licencierc. ( = shake off) semer• he managed to lose the detective who was following him il a réussi à semer le détective qui le suivait• you can't lose! (inf) tu n'as rien à perdre !* * *[luːz] 1.transitive verb (prét, pp lost)1) ( mislay) perdre [object, person]to lose one's way — lit se perdre; fig s'égarer
2) ( not have any longer) perdreto lose touch — (with person, reality) perdre contact
to lose the use of — perdre l'usage de [limb, muscle]
nothing to lose — (colloq) rien à perdre
3) (miss, waste) manquer [chance]; perdre [time]4) ( be defeated in) gen, Jur, Politics, Sport perdre [war, race, bet, election]; avoir le dessous dans [argument]; perdre en [appeal]5) ( lose sight of) perdre [quelque chose] de vue [moving object]; figyou've lost me there! — (colloq) je ne vous suis plus!
6) (shake off, get rid of) se débarrasser de [habit]; semer (colloq) [pursuer]7) ( go slow) [clock] retarder de [minutes, seconds]8) ( cause to forfeit)2.intransitive verb (prét, pp lost)1) ( be defeated) se faire battre (to par)2) (be worse off, deteriorate) perdre3) [clock, watch] retarder3.reflexive verb (prét, pp lost)to lose oneself in — se plonger dans [book]; se perdre dans [contemplation]
Phrasal Verbs:- lose out••to lose it (totally) — (colloq) péter les plombs (colloq)
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7 lose
1 ( mislay) perdre [object, person] ; to lose one's way lit se perdre, perdre son chemin ; fig s'égarer ;2 ( be deprived of) perdre ; the poem has lost something in translation le poème a perdu quelque chose à la traduction ; to lose interest in sth se désintéresser de qch ; to lose touch (with person, reality, situation) perdre contact (with avec) ; to lose the use of perdre l'usage de [limb, muscle] ; to lose one's life mourir ; many lives were lost il y a eu de nombreuses victimes ; 200 jobs will be lost 200 emplois vont être supprimés ; to lose one's breath s'essouffler ; to lose one's figure s'épaissir ; he's losing his looks il n'est plus aussi beau qu'autrefois ; we are losing a lot of business to our competitors nous avons perdu beaucoup d'affaires au profit de nos concurrents ; they lost both sons in the war ils ont perdu leurs deux fils pendant la guerre ; to be lost at sea périr en mer ; to have nothing/little to lose ○ n'avoir rien/pas grand-chose à perdre ; try it, you've nothing to lose ○ ! essaie, tu n'as rien à perdre! ; you've nothing to lose by applying tu ne risques rien en posant ta candidature ; I daren't, I've got too much to lose je n'ose pas, c'est trop risqué ;3 (miss, waste) manquer [chance] ; perdre [time] ; there's no time/not a moment to lose il n'y a pas de temps/un instant à perdre ; stopping meant losing vital seconds s'arrêter représentait une perte de secondes capitales ; he lost no time in replying il n'a pas perdu de temps pour répondre ; this allusion was not lost on him cette allusion ne lui a pas échappé ;4 ( be defeated in) gen, Jur, Pol, Sport perdre [fight, war, match, game, race, case, bet, election, vote] ; avoir le dessous dans [argument, debate] ; perdre en [appeal] ;5 ( not hear or understand) manquer [remark, word] ; ( not see) perdre [qch] de vue [moving object] ; you've lost me there ○ ! je ne vous suis plus! ; their cries were lost in the din leurs cris ont été étouffés par le vacarme ;6 (shake off, get rid of) se débarrasser de [habit, unwanted person or object] ; semer ○ [pursuer] ; supprimer [job] ; licencier [worker] ;8 ( cause to forfeit) to lose sb sth faire perdre qch à qn ; his speech lost the party a million votes son discours a fait perdre au parti un million de voix.1 ( be defeated) perdre (to sb devant qn) ; they lost to the French team ils se sont fait battre par l'équipe française ;2 (be worse off, deteriorate) perdre ; they lost on the sale of the house ils ont vendu la maison à perte ; the novel loses in translation le roman y perd à la traduction ; try it, you can't lose! essaie, tu n'as rien à perdre! ;3 [clock, watch] retarder.C v refl ( prét, pp lost) to lose oneself in se plonger dans [book] ; se perdre dans [contemplation].to lose it (totally) ○ péter les plombs ○.■ lose out être perdant ; to lose out on perdre dans [deal] ; manquer, rater ○ [chance, opportunity, bargain] ; to lose out to sb se faire dépasser par qn. -
8 cause
cause [koz]feminine nouna. ( = raison) causec. ( = intérêts) caused. (locutions)► en cause• mettre en cause [+ innocence, nécessité, capacité] to call into question• et pour cause ! and for good reason!* * *koz1) ( origine) cause2) ( raison) reason3) ( ensemble d'intérêts) cause4) ( affaire) caseles causes célèbres — the causes célèbres, the famous cases
être en cause — [système, fait, organisme] to be at issue; [personne] to be involved
mettre quelqu'un/quelque chose en cause — to implicate somebody/something
remettre en cause — to challenge [principe, hiérarchie, décision]; to cast doubt on [projet, efficacité, signification]; to undermine [efforts, proposition, processus]
remise en cause — ( de système) reappraisal
avoir or obtenir gain de cause — to win one's case
donner gain de cause à — to decide in favour [BrE] of
••* * *koz nf1) (entraînant un effet) [mort, conflit, malentendu] causeC'est arrivé à cause de lui. — It happened because of him.
Nous n'avons pas pu sortir à cause du mauvais temps. — We couldn't go out because of the bad weather.
Le musée est fermé pour cause de travaux. — The museum is closed for building work.
2) DROIT caseLe père de l'enfant a été mis hors de cause. — The child's father has been cleared.
en connaissance de cause [choisir, décider, agir, accepter] — in full knowledge of the facts
3) (= parti, camp) causedéfendre la cause de qn [personne] — to stand up for sb, to take sb's side, [groupe, communauté] to champion sb
Elle défend la cause des opprimés. — She champions the oppressed.
être en cause [intérêts] — to be at stake, [personne] to be involved, [qualité] to be in question
mettre en cause [personne] — to implicate, [qualité de qch, honnêteté de qn] to call into question
remettre en cause — to challenge, to call into question
* * *cause nf1 ( origine) cause (de of); un rapport or une relation de cause à effet entre a relation of cause and effect between; il n'y a pas d'effet sans cause there's no smoke without fire; à petites causes grands effets minor causes can bring about major results;2 ( raison) reason; j'ignore la cause de leur colère/départ I don't know the reason for their anger/departure; pour une cause encore indéterminée for a reason as yet unknown; il s'est fâché et pour cause he got angry and with good reason; sans cause [licenciement, chagrin] groundless; c'est une cause de licenciement immédiat it's a ground for immediate dismissal; pour cause économique for financial reasons; pour cause de maladie because of illness; fermé pour cause d'inventaire/de travaux closed for stocktaking/for renovation; avoir pour cause qch to be caused by sth; à cause de because of;3 ( ensemble d'intérêts) cause; défendre une/sa cause to defend a/one's cause; se battre pour la cause to fight for the cause; une cause juste/perdue a just/lost cause; être dévoué à la cause commune to be dedicated to the common cause; être acquis à la cause de qn to be won over to sb's cause; gagner qn à sa cause to win sb over to one's cause; pour les besoins de la cause for the sake of the cause; prendre fait et cause pour qn to take up the cause of sb; faire cause commune avec qn to make common cause with sb; pour la bonne cause for a good cause;4 ( affaire) case; plaider/gagner/perdre une cause to plead/win/lose a case; plaider la cause de qn/sa propre cause to plead sb's case/one's own case; la cause est entendue Jur the case is closed; fig it's an open and shut case; les causes célèbres the causes célèbres, the famous cases; être en cause [système, fait, organisme] to be at issue; [personne] to be involved; être hors de cause to be in the clear; mettre qn/qch en cause to implicate sb/sth; mise en cause implication; mettre qn/qch hors de cause gén to clear sb/sth; [police] to eliminate [sb] from an enquiry; remettre en cause to call [sth] into question, to challenge [politique, principe, droit, hiérarchie, décision]; to cast doubt on [projet, efficacité, signification]; to undermine [efforts, proposition, processus]; tout est remis en cause everything has been thrown back into doubt; se remettre en cause to pass one's life under review; remise en cause ( de soi-même) rethink; ( de système) reappraisal; avoir or obtenir gain de cause to win one's case; donner gain de cause à to decide in favourGB of.en toute connaissance de cause in full knowledge of the facts, fully conversant with the facts sout; en tout état de cause in any case; en désespoir de cause as a last resort.[koz] nom fémininle mauvais temps est cause que je n'ai pu aller vous rendre visite I wasn't able to come and see you on account of the bad weather2. PHILOSOPHIE causela cause première/seconde/finale the prime/secondary/final cause[motif]cause licite/illicite just/unjust cause4. [parti que l'on prend] causea. [pour un bon motif] for a good causeb. (humoristique) [en vue du mariage] with honourable intentions————————à cause de locution prépositionnelle1. [par la faute de] because ou on account of, due ou owing to2. [en considération de] because ou on account of, due ou owing to3. [par égard pour] for the sake ou because of————————en cause locution adjectivale1. [concerné] in questionla voiture en cause était à l'arrêt the car involved ou in question was stationaryla somme/l'enjeu en cause the amount/the thing at stake2. [que l'on suspecte]3. [contesté]être en cause [talent] to be in question————————en cause locution adverbiale1. [en accusation]2. [en doute]en tout état de cause locution adverbiale————————pour cause de locution prépositionnelle‘fermé pour cause de décès’ ‘closed owing to bereavement’ -
9 cause
cause [kɔ:z]1 noun∎ to be the cause of sth être (la) cause de qch;∎ he was the cause of all our trouble c'est lui qui a été la cause ou qui a été à l'origine de tous nos ennuis;∎ the cause of the disease is not yet known la cause de la maladie demeure inconnue;∎ she is the cause of his being in prison c'est à cause d'elle qu'il est en prison;∎ the relation of cause and effect la relation de cause à effet(b) (justification) raison f, motif m;∎ there is cause for anxiety il y a lieu d'être inquiet, il y a de quoi s'inquiéter;∎ we mustn't give them cause for complaint il ne faut pas leur donner de motif de se plaindre;∎ they have cause to be bitter ils ont lieu d'être amers, ils ont de quoi être amers;∎ to have good cause for doing sth avoir de bonnes raisons de faire qch;∎ with (good) cause à juste titre;∎ without good cause sans cause ou raison valable(c) (principle) cause f;∎ in the cause of justice pour la cause de la justice;∎ the cause of equal rights la cause de l'égalité des droits;∎ her lifelong devotion to the cause son dévouement de toujours à la cause;∎ formal to make common cause with sb faire cause commune avec qn;∎ to work for a good cause travailler pour une bonne cause;∎ it's all in a good cause! c'est pour une bonne cause!∎ to plead sb's cause plaider la cause de qn;∎ cause of action fondement m d'une action en justicecauser, provoquer;∎ smoking can cause cancer le tabac peut provoquer des cancers;∎ to cause grief causer du chagrin;∎ he has caused us a lot of trouble il nous a créé beaucoup d'ennuis;∎ it will only cause trouble cela ne servira qu'à semer la zizanie;∎ to cause sb/sth to do sth faire faire qch à qn/qch;∎ what caused him to change his mind? qu'est-ce qui l'a fait changer d'avis?;∎ this caused me to lose my job à cause de cela, j'ai perdu mon emploi -
10 cause one's to lose his bearings or way
English-spanish dictionary > cause one's to lose his bearings or way
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11 lose
1. transitive verb,somebody has nothing to lose [by doing something] — es kann jemandem nicht schaden[, wenn er etwas tut]
lose one's way — sich verlaufen/verfahren
4) (fail to obtain) nicht bekommen [Preis, Vertrag usw.]; (fail to hear) nicht mitbekommen [Teil einer Rede usw.]; (fail to catch) verpassen, versäumen [Zug, Bus]the motion was lost — der Antrag kam nicht durch od. scheiterte
5) (be defeated in) verlieren [Kampf, Spiel, Wette, Prozess usw.]6) (cause loss of)you['ve] lost me — (fig.) ich komme nicht mehr mit
7) (get rid of) abschütteln [Verfolger]; loswerden [Erkältung]2. intransitive verb,lose weight — abnehmen. See also academic.ru/43876/lost">lost
1) (suffer loss) einen Verlust erleiden; (in business) Verlust machen (on bei); (in match, contest) verlierenlose in freshness — an Frische verlieren
you can't lose — (coll.) du kannst nur profitieren od. gewinnen
2) (become slow) [Uhr:] nachgehenPhrasal Verbs:- lose out* * *[lu:z]past tense, past participle - lost; verb1) (to stop having; to have no longer: She has lost interest in her work; I have lost my watch; He lost hold of the rope.) verlieren2) (to have taken away from one (by death, accident etc): She lost her father last year; The ship was lost in the storm; He has lost his job.) verlieren5) (to waste or use more (time) than is necessary: He lost no time in informing the police of the crime.) verlieren•- loser- loss
- lost
- at a loss
- a bad
- good loser
- lose oneself in
- lose one's memory
- lose out
- lost in
- lost on* * *<lost, lost>[lu:z]I. vt1. (forfeit)▪ to \lose sth to sb etw an jdn verlierento \lose altitude/speed an Höhe/Geschwindigkeit verlierento \lose one's appetite den Appetit verlierento \lose blood Blut verlierento \lose one's breath außer Atem kommento \lose courage den Mut verlierento \lose favour with sb jds Gunst verlierento \lose the upper hand die Oberhand verlierento \lose one's job seinen Arbeitsplatz verlierento \lose the lead die Führung abgeben [müssen]to \lose money Geld verlierento \lose popularity an Popularität einbüßento \lose trade Geschäftseinbußen erleidento \lose weight an Gewicht verlieren, abnehmen2. (through death)she lost her son in the fire ihr Sohn ist beim Brand umgekommento \lose a friend/relative einen Freund/Verwandten verlierento \lose one's life sein Leben verlieren3. (miscarry)to \lose a baby ein Kind [o Baby] verlieren4. usu passive5. (waste)to \lose an opportunity eine Gelegenheit versäumento \lose time Zeit verlierento \lose no time in doing sth etw sofort [o unverzüglich] tun6. watch, clockto \lose time nachgehen7. (not find)▪ to \lose sb jdn verlierento \lose the path/route vom Weg/von der Route abkommenyou've lost me there da kann ich dir nicht ganz folgen10. (not win)▪ to \lose sth etw verlierento \lose an argument in einer Diskussion unterliegento \lose a battle/game eine Schlacht/ein Spiel verlieren11. (forget)to \lose a language/skill eine Sprache/Fähigkeit verlernen12. (cause loss of)it almost lost me my job es kostete mich fast den Job, es hat mich fast um meinen Job gebracht13.▶ to \lose the day [for sb] jdn um den Sieg bringen▶ to \lose face das Gesicht verlieren▶ to \lose one's head den Kopf verlieren▶ to \lose heart den Mut verlieren▶ to \lose one's heart to sb sein Herz [an jdn] verlierenI almost lost it ich bin fast verrückt geworden [o fam fast durchgedreht]▶ to \lose one's lunch AM (sl) kotzen sl▶ to have nothing/something to \lose nichts/etwas zu verlieren haben▶ to \lose sight of sth etw aus den Augen verlieren▶ to \lose sleep over [or about] sth sich dat wegen einer S. gen Sorgen machen, wegen einer S. gen kein Auge zutun können▶ to \lose touch [with sb] den Kontakt [zu jdm] verlierenI've lost track of the number of times he's asked me for money ich weiß schon gar nicht mehr, wie oft er mich um Geld gebeten hat▶ to \lose oneself in thought [völlig] gedankenverloren dastehen/dasitzenII. vi1. (be beaten)▪ to \lose [to sb/sth] [gegen jdn/etw] verlierenthe team lost 2-0/by 2 points das Team verlor [mit] 2:0/verpasste den Sieg um 2 Punkte2. (flop) ein Verlustgeschäft sein [o darstellen]the movie lost big at the box office der Film wurde ein Riesenflop fam3. (invest badly)4.▶ you can't \lose du kannst nur gewinnen* * *[luːz] pret, ptp lost1. vt1) (generally) verlieren; pursuer abschütteln; one's French vergessen, verlernen; prize nicht bekommenor (driver's) license (US) — die Stelle/den Führerschein verlieren
the cat has lost a lot of hair —
the shares have lost 15% in a month — die Aktien sind in einem Monat um 15% gefallen
to lose one's way (lit) — sich verirren; (fig) die Richtung verlieren
you will lose nothing by helping them —
they have nothing/a lot to lose — sie haben nichts/viel zu verlieren
that mistake lost him his job/her friendship/the game — dieser Fehler kostete ihn die Stellung/ihre Freundschaft/den Sieg
she lost her brother in the war — sie hat ihren Bruder im Krieg verloren
he lost the use of his legs in the accident — seit dem Unfall kann er seine Beine nicht mehr bewegen
2)3)you've lost me now with all this abstract argument — bei dieser abstrakten Argumentation komme ich nicht mehr mit
to lose no opportunity to do sth — keine Gelegenheit verpassen, etw zu tun
5) (inf= go crazy)
to lose it — durchdrehen (inf)6)(passive usages)
to be lost (things) — verschwunden sein; (people) sich verlaufen haben; (fig) verloren sein; (words) untergehenI can't follow the reasoning, I'm lost — ich kann der Argumentation nicht folgen, ich verstehe nichts mehr
he was soon lost in the crowd — er hatte sich bald in der Menge verloren
to be lost at sea — auf See geblieben sein; (ship) auf See vermisst sein
the ship was lost with all hands — das Schiff war mit der ganzen Besatzung untergegangen
to get lost — sich verlaufen or verirren; (boxes etc) verloren gehen
I got lost after the second chapter —
to get lost in the post/move — in der Post/beim Umzug verloren gehen
get lost! (inf) — verschwinde! (inf)
to look lost — (ganz) verloren aussehen; (fig) ratlos or hilflos aussehen
you look ( as though you're) lost, can I help you? — haben Sie sich verlaufen or verirrt, kann ich Ihnen behilflich sein?
to give sth up for lost —
he was lost to science he is lost to all finer feelings — er war für die Wissenschaft verloren er hat keinen Sinn für höhere Gefühle
the joke/remark was lost on her — der Witz/die Bemerkung kam bei ihr nicht an
to be lost in thought —
to be lost in one's reading/playing — in seine Lektüre/sein Spiel versunken sein
2. viverlieren; (watch) nachgehenthe novel loses a lot in the film — der Roman verliert in der Verfilmung sehr
you will not lose by helping him — es kann dir nicht schaden, wenn du ihm hilfst
* * *A v/t1. allg eine Sache, auch seinen Glauben, das Interesse, seine Stimme, den Verstand, Zeit etc verlieren:have lost one’s voice auch heiser sein;lose one’s cool umg an die Decke gehen;lose no time in doing sth sich beeilen, etwas zu tun; etwas sofort tun;2. sein Vermögen, seine Position etc verlieren, einbüßen, kommen um:lose credibility an Glaubwürdigkeit einbüßen oder verlieren;lose one’s health seine Gesundheit einbüßen;have nothing to lose nichts zu verlieren haben;3. verlieren (durch Tod, Trennung etc):a) einen Patienten (an einen anderen Arzt) verlieren,b) einen Patienten nicht retten können;she has lost her husband to her best friend sie hat ihren Mann an ihre beste Freundin verloren4. ein Spiel, einen Prozess etc verlieren:point lost Minuspunkt m6. eine Gesetzesvorlage nicht durchbringen7. den Zug etc, auch fig eine Gelegenheit etc versäumen, -passenI lost the end of his speech mir entging das Ende seiner Rede9. aus den Augen verlieren10. vergessen:11. einen Verfolger abschütteln12. eine Krankheit loswerden13. nachgehen um (Uhr):my watch loses two minutes a day meine Uhr geht am Tag zwei Minuten nach15. lose o.s. ina) sich verirren in (dat):b) fig sich verlieren in (dat):lose o.s. in thought;c) fig sich vertiefen in (akk):B v/ion bei einem Geschäft etc):you won’t lose by doing it es kann nicht(s) schaden, wenn du es tust3. a) Verluste erleiden:they lost heavily sie erlitten schwere Verlusteb) verlieren (in bei, durch):the story has lost in translation die Geschichte hat durch die Übersetzung (sprachlich) verloren4. verlieren (in an dat):lose (in weight) (an Gewicht) abnehmen;the days were losing in warmth die Tage wurden kälter5. schlechter oder schwächer werden:he lost daily er wurde von Tag zu Tag schwächer6. nachgehen (Uhr)* * *1. transitive verb,1) verlieren; kommen um, verlieren [Leben, Habe]somebody has nothing to lose [by doing something] — es kann jemandem nicht schaden[, wenn er etwas tut]
lose one's way — sich verlaufen/verfahren
2) (fail to maintain) verlieren; (become slow by) [Uhr:] nachgehen [zwei Minuten täglich usw.]4) (fail to obtain) nicht bekommen [Preis, Vertrag usw.]; (fail to hear) nicht mitbekommen [Teil einer Rede usw.]; (fail to catch) verpassen, versäumen [Zug, Bus]the motion was lost — der Antrag kam nicht durch od. scheiterte
5) (be defeated in) verlieren [Kampf, Spiel, Wette, Prozess usw.]you['ve] lost me — (fig.) ich komme nicht mehr mit
7) (get rid of) abschütteln [Verfolger]; loswerden [Erkältung]2. intransitive verb,lose weight — abnehmen. See also lost
1) (suffer loss) einen Verlust erleiden; (in business) Verlust machen (on bei); (in match, contest) verlierenyou can't lose — (coll.) du kannst nur profitieren od. gewinnen
2) (become slow) [Uhr:] nachgehenPhrasal Verbs:- lose out* * *v.(§ p.,p.p.: lost)= verlieren v.(§ p.,pp.: verlor, verloren) -
12 lose
[luːz] 1.1) (mislay) perdere [object, person]to lose one's way — perdersi (anche fig.)
2) (be deprived of) perdereto lose touch — (with reality) perdere contatto; (with person) perdere i contatti
to lose the use of — perdere l'uso di [ muscle]
nothing to lose — colloq. niente da perdere
3) (miss, waste) perdere, sprecare [chance, time]4) (be defeated in) dir. pol. sport perdere [war, race, bet, election]; avere la peggio in [ argument]; perdere (una causa) in [ appeal]5) (not see) perdere (di vista) [ moving object]you've lost me there! — colloq. fig. non ti seguo più!
6) (shake off) perdere [ habit]; seminare [ pursuer]; eliminare [ post]2.to lose sb. sth. — fare perdere o costare qcs. a qcn
1) (be defeated) perdere (to sb. con, contro qcn.)2) (be worse off, deteriorate) perderci, rimetterci3) [ watch] rimanere indietro, andare indietro3.to lose oneself in — immergersi in [ book]; perdersi in [ contemplation]
- lose out* * *[lu:z]past tense, past participle - lost; verb1) (to stop having; to have no longer: She has lost interest in her work; I have lost my watch; He lost hold of the rope.) perdere2) (to have taken away from one (by death, accident etc): She lost her father last year; The ship was lost in the storm; He has lost his job.) perdere3) (to put (something) where it cannot be found: My secretary has lost your letter.) perdere4) (not to win: I always lose at cards; She lost the race.) perdere5) (to waste or use more (time) than is necessary: He lost no time in informing the police of the crime.) perdere•- loser- loss
- lost
- at a loss
- a bad
- good loser
- lose oneself in
- lose one's memory
- lose out
- lost in
- lost on* * *[luːz] 1.1) (mislay) perdere [object, person]to lose one's way — perdersi (anche fig.)
2) (be deprived of) perdereto lose touch — (with reality) perdere contatto; (with person) perdere i contatti
to lose the use of — perdere l'uso di [ muscle]
nothing to lose — colloq. niente da perdere
3) (miss, waste) perdere, sprecare [chance, time]4) (be defeated in) dir. pol. sport perdere [war, race, bet, election]; avere la peggio in [ argument]; perdere (una causa) in [ appeal]5) (not see) perdere (di vista) [ moving object]you've lost me there! — colloq. fig. non ti seguo più!
6) (shake off) perdere [ habit]; seminare [ pursuer]; eliminare [ post]2.to lose sb. sth. — fare perdere o costare qcs. a qcn
1) (be defeated) perdere (to sb. con, contro qcn.)2) (be worse off, deteriorate) perderci, rimetterci3) [ watch] rimanere indietro, andare indietro3.to lose oneself in — immergersi in [ book]; perdersi in [ contemplation]
- lose out -
13 lose
أَخَّرَت (الساعة) \ lose: (of a watch or clock) to become slow by (a certain amount of time): My watch loses five minutes a day. \ أَفْقَدَ(هُ)... \ lose: to cause (sb.) not to have sth. any longer: His laziness lost him his job. \ خَسِرَ \ lose: not to have any longer; become unable to find; become separated from: I’ve lost my job. He lost his way in the dark. He lost an arm in the accident. lose: to become weaker or poorer by: He lost a lot of weight through illness. We lost on that business deal, be beaten in (a match); not win (a fight, an election, etc.) He lost the last election by very few votes. \ خَسَّرَ \ lose: to cause (sb.) not to have sth. any longer: His laziness lost him his job. \ فَقَدَ \ lose: not to have any longer; become unable to find; become separated from: I’ve lost my job. He lost his way in the dark. He lost an arm in the accident, to become weaker or poorer by He lost a lot of weight through illness. We lost on that business deal, not to keep He lost his temper (or Balance, or head, or hold). -
14 lose
<lost, lost> [lu:z] vt1) ( cease to have)to \lose sth etw verlieren;to \lose one's appetite/ balance den Appetit/das Gleichgewicht verlieren;to \lose blood Blut verlieren;to \lose one's breath außer Atem kommen;to \lose one's command/ control of [or over] sb/ sth das Kommando/die Kontrolle über jdn/etw verlieren;to \lose consciousness/ courage das Bewusstsein/den Mut verlieren;to \lose favour with sb jds Gunst f verlieren;to \lose interest in sb/ sth das Interesse an jdm/etw verlieren;to \lose the upper hand die Oberhand verlieren;to \lose one's job seinen Arbeitsplatz verlieren;to \lose the lead die Führung abgeben [müssen];to \lose money Geld verlieren;to \lose popularity an Popularität einbüßen;to \lose trade Geschäftseinbußen erleiden;to \lose weight an Gewicht verlieren, abnehmen;to \lose a friend/ relative einen Freund/Verwandten verlieren;to \lose one's life sein Leben verlieren3) ( miscarry)to \lose a baby ein Kind [o Baby] verlierento \lose a plane/ ship ein Flugzeug/Schiff verlieren5) ( waste)to \lose an opportunity eine Gelegenheit versäumen;to \lose time Zeit verschwenden;to \lose no time in doing sth etw sofort [o unverzüglich] tun6) ( run slower by)to \lose time watch, clock nachgehen7) ( become unable to find)to \lose the path/ route vom Weg/von der Route abkommen;9) ( confuse)to \lose sb jdn in die Irre führen [o irreführen];to \lose sth etw verlieren;to \lose an argument in einer Diskussion unterliegen;to \lose a battle/ game eine Schlacht/ein Spiel verlieren11) ( cause loss of)his negligence lost him his job seine Nachlässigkeit kostete ihn seinen JobPHRASES:to \lose the day [for sb] [jdn] um den Sieg bringen;to \lose face das Gesicht verlieren;to \lose ground an Boden verlieren;to \lose one's head/nerve/temper den Kopf/die Nerven/die Beherrschung verlieren;to \lose heart den Mut verlieren;to \lose one's heart [to sb] sein Herz [an jdn] verlieren;to have nothing/something to \lose nichts/etwas zu verlieren haben;to \lose sight of sth etw aus den Augen verlieren;to \lose sleep over [or about] sth sich dat wegen einer S. gen Sorgen machen, wegen einer S. gen kein Auge zutun können;to \lose touch [with sb] den Kontakt [zu jdm] verlieren;to \lose touch [with sth] [über etw akk] nicht mehr auf dem Laufenden sein;I've lost track of the number of times he's asked me for money ich weiß schon gar nicht mehr, wie oft er mich um Geld gebeten hat;to \lose oneself in thought [völlig] gedankenverloren dastehen/dasitzen;to \lose it durchdrehen ( fam)1) ( be defeated)to \lose [to sb/sth] [gegen jdn/etw] verlierenI bet that movie will \lose big at the box office ich wette, dieser Film wird ein Riesenflop werden -
15 run down
1. transitive verb1) (collide with) überfahren2) (criticize) heruntermachen (ugs.); herabsetzen3) (cause to diminish) abbauen; verringern [Produktion]2. intransitive verb1) hin-/herunterlaufen/-rennen/-fahren2) (decline) sich verringern3) (lose power) ausgehen; [Batterie:] leer werden; [Uhr, Spielzeug:] ablaufen* * *1) ((of a clock, battery etc) to finish working: My watch has run down - it needs rewinding.) ablaufen3) (to speak badly of: He is always running me down.) niedermachen* * *◆ run downI. vthe's always \run downning himself down er macht sich immer selbst schlecht▪ to \run down down ⇆ sth etw reduzierento \run down down production die Produktion drosselnto \run down down one's savings seine Ersparnisse aufwendento \run down down supplies Lieferungen einschränken3. (hit)▪ to \run down down ⇆ sb jdn überfahrento \run down down a boat ein Boot rammen4. (exhaust)since he took that extra job, he's really \run down himself down seitdem er diese zusätzliche Arbeit angenommen hat, ist er wirklich abgespanntto \run down down a car battery eine Autobatterie völlig leer machen5. (find)▪ to \run down down ⇆ sb/sth jdn/etw ausfindig machenII. vithe fishing industry is \run downning down but the government does nothing die Fischindustrie geht den Bach runter, aber die Regierung unternimmt nichts dagegen2. (lose power) battery leer werden* * *A v/i1. herab-, herunter-, hinunterlaufen (auch Tränen etc)3. abfließen (Flut, Wasser etc)4. sinken, abnehmen (Zahl, Wert etc)5. fig herunterkommenB v/t1. AUTO, etc anfahren, überfahren2. SCHIFF in den Grund bohren3. jemanden einholen4. Wild, auch einen Verbrecher zur Strecke bringen5. erschöpfen, eine Batterie zu stark entladen:be run down erschöpft oder abgespannt sein6. ausfindig machen, aufstöbern7. herabsetzen:a) die Qualität, den Preis etc mindernb) die Belegschaft etc abbauenc) fig schlechtmachen8. einen Betrieb etc herunterwirtschaften* * *1. transitive verb1) (collide with) überfahren2) (criticize) heruntermachen (ugs.); herabsetzen3) (cause to diminish) abbauen; verringern [Produktion]4) (cause to lose power) leer machen [Batterie]2. intransitive verb1) hin-/herunterlaufen/-rennen/-fahren2) (decline) sich verringern3) (lose power) ausgehen; [Batterie:] leer werden; [Uhr, Spielzeug:] ablaufen* * *adj.heruntergewirtschaftet adj. v.überfahren v. -
16 turn off
1. transitive verb1) abschalten; abstellen [Wasser, Gas]; zudrehen [Wasserhahn]2) (coll.): (cause to lose interest) anwidern2. intransitive verb* * *1) (to cause (water, electricity etc) to stop flowing: I've turned off the water / the electricity.) abdrehen,-schalten2) (to turn (a tap, switch etc) so that something stops: I turned off the tap.) ausschalten3) (to cause (something) to stop working by switching it off: He turned off the light / the oven.) ausschalten* * *◆ turn offI. vt1. (switch off)▪ to \turn off off ⇆ sth etw abschaltento \turn off off the alarm/a computer den Alarm/einen Computer abschaltento \turn off off the engine/the power den Motor/den Strom abstellento \turn off off the gas das Gas abdrehento \turn off the light[s] off das Licht ausmachento \turn off the radio/TV off das Radio/den Fernseher ausschalten2. (cause to lose interest)the salesman's high-pressure pitch really \turn offed her off die harte Verkaufstaktik des Händlers stieß sie wirklich abthat kind of approach to learning \turn offs students off bei dieser Art der Wissensvermittlung verlieren die Studenten die Lust am Lernen▪ to \turn off off ⇆ sb jdn abtörnen slII. vi1. (leave one's path) abbiegenshe \turn offed off the road/onto a small dirt road sie bog von der Straße/in einen kleinen Feldweg ab* * *A v/t1. das Gas, Wasser etc abdrehen, auch ein Gerät, den Motor abstellen, das Licht, Radio etc ausmachen, -schalten2. einen Schlag etc abwenden, ablenken3. Br umg jemanden feuern, rausschmeißen5. umga) jemanden anwidernb) jemandem die Lust nehmenB v/i abbiegen (Person, auch Straße)* * *1. transitive verb1) abschalten; abstellen [Wasser, Gas]; zudrehen [Wasserhahn]2) (coll.): (cause to lose interest) anwidern2. intransitive verb* * *v.abbiegen v.abdrehen v.abschalten v.absperren (Licht, Wasser) v.abstellen v.ausschalten v. -
17 desesperanzar
v.1 to cause to lose hope.2 to deprive of all hope, to deprive of hope.* * *1 to drive to despair1 to despair, lose hope, give up hope (de, of)* * *1.2.See:* * *desesperanzar [A4 ]vtto make … lose hope, lead … to despairto give up hope, despair, lose hope* * *♦ vtto cause to lose hope* * *v/t make lose hope -
18 extraviar
v.1 to lose, to mislay (object).2 to allow to wander (mirada, vista).3 to misplace, to mislay, to lose.María extravió la cartera Mary misplaced her handbag.4 to mislead, to lead astray.El baquiano extravió al grupo The guide misled the group.* * *1 (persona) to mislead2 (objeto) to mislay, lose3 (desorientar) to make get lost4 (pervertir) to lead astray1 (persona) to get lost, lose one's way2 (objeto) to get mislaid3 figurado (descarriarse) to go astray* * *verb1) to mislead2) lose•* * *1. VT1) [+ objeto] to lose, mislay, misplace2) pey [+ dinero] to embezzle3) (=desorientar) [+ persona] to mislead, misdirect2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo (frml) to mislay (frml), to lose2.extraviarse v pron (frml) persona to get lost, lose one's way; animal to go missing, get lost; documento to go missing o astray* * *= mislay.Nota: Pasado y participio: mislaid.Ex. Workflow systems automate business processes, such as the management of a housing benefit claim, to ensure all tasks are completed on time and no information can be lost or mislaid.----* extraviarse = go astray, lose + Posesivo + way, straggle.* * *1.verbo transitivo (frml) to mislay (frml), to lose2.extraviarse v pron (frml) persona to get lost, lose one's way; animal to go missing, get lost; documento to go missing o astray* * *= mislay.Nota: Pasado y participio: mislaid.Ex: Workflow systems automate business processes, such as the management of a housing benefit claim, to ensure all tasks are completed on time and no information can be lost or mislaid.
* extraviarse = go astray, lose + Posesivo + way, straggle.* * *vt( frml); «persona» to get lost, lose one's way; «animal» to go missing, get lost, stray; «documento» to go missing o astray, get lost* * *
Multiple Entries:
extraviar
extraviar algo
extraviar ( conjugate extraviar) verbo transitivo (frml) to mislay (frml), to lose
extraviarse verbo pronominal (frml) [persona/animal] to get lost;
[ documento] to go missing
extraviar verbo transitivo to lose
' extraviar' also found in these entries:
English:
mislay
* * *♦ vt1. [objeto] to lose, to mislay2. [excursionista] to mislead, to cause to lose one's way3. [mirada, vista] to allow to wander* * *v/t lose, mislay* * *extraviar {85} vt1) : to mislead, to lead astray2) : to misplace, to lose* * * -
19 fade
1. intransitive verb2) (lose freshness, vigour) verblassen; [v]erlöschen; [Läufer:] langsamer werden; [Schönheit:] verblühenfade [in colour] — [ver]bleichen
4) (grow pale, dim)the light faded [into darkness] — es dunkelte
5) (fig.): (lose strength) [Erinnerung:] verblassen; [Eingebung, Kreativität, Optimismus:] nachlassen; [Freude, Lust, Liebe:] erlöschen; [Ruhm:] verblassen; [Traum, Hoffnung:] zerrinnen2. transitive verbfade into the distance — in der Ferne entschwinden; [Laut, Stimme:] in der Ferne verklingen
ausbleichen [Vorhang, Teppich, Farbe]Phrasal Verbs:- academic.ru/86872/fade_away">fade away- fade in- fade out* * *[feid](to (make something) lose strength, colour, loudness etc: The noise gradually faded (away).) verschwinden* * *[feɪd]I. vi1. (lose colour) ausbleichen, verblassen2. (lose intensity) nachlassen; light schwächer werden; (at end of day) dunkel werden; sound verklingen; smile vergehen, [ver]schwinden; suntan verbleichen3. (disappear)day slowly \faded into night der Tag ging langsam in die Nacht überto \fade from sight [or view] aus dem Blickfeld verschwindento \fade fast ( liter: weaken and die) dahinwelken euph liter, dahinsiechen; (fall asleep) am Einschlafen seinwe're fading, so we have coffee in the hotel café wir sind ziemlich fertig, wir trinken jetzt erst mal einen Kaffee im HotelcaféII. vt▪ to \fade sth etw ausbleichen* * *[feɪd]1. vi1) (= lose colour) verblassen; (material, colour) verbleichen, verblassen; (on exposure to light) verschießen; (flower) verblühen; (= lose shine) seinen Glanz verlieren2) (fig memory) verblassen; (sight, strength, inspiration, feeling) nachlassen, schwinden (geh); (hopes) zerrinnen; (smile) vergehen, verschwinden; (beauty) verblühen; (sound) verklingen, verhallen; (radio signal) schwächer werdenhopes are fading of finding any more survivors — die Hoffnung, noch weitere Überlebende zu finden, wird immer geringer
he faded into obscurity — er geriet langsam in Vergessenheit
to fade into the background (person) — sich im Hintergrund halten; (fears) in den Hintergrund rücken
2. vt1) (= cause to lose colour) ausbleichen2) (RAD, TV, FILM) ausblenden3. n (RAD, TV, FILM)Abblende f* * *fade [feıd]A v/i1. (ver)welken2. verschießen, verblassen, ver-, ausbleichen (Farbe etc)3. auch fade away sich auflösen (Menge), immer weniger werden (Personen), MED immer schwächer werden (Person), verklingen (Lied etc), verblassen (Erinnerung), verrauchen (Zorn etc), zerrinnen (Hoffnungen):see one’s hopes of victory fade seine Siegeshoffnungen schwinden sehen4. RADIO schwinden (Ton, Sender)5. nachlassen (Bremsen), (Sportler auch) abbauenB v/t1. (ver)welken lassen2. eine Farbe etc ausbleichenfade in (up) aufblenden (einblenden)* * *1. intransitive verb1) (droop, wither) [Blätter, Blumen:] [ver]welken, welk werden2) (lose freshness, vigour) verblassen; [v]erlöschen; [Läufer:] langsamer werden; [Schönheit:] verblühen3) (lose colour) bleichenfade [in colour] — [ver]bleichen
4) (grow pale, dim)the light faded [into darkness] — es dunkelte
5) (fig.): (lose strength) [Erinnerung:] verblassen; [Eingebung, Kreativität, Optimismus:] nachlassen; [Freude, Lust, Liebe:] erlöschen; [Ruhm:] verblassen; [Traum, Hoffnung:] zerrinnen6) (grow faint) [Laut:] verklingen2. transitive verbfade into the distance — in der Ferne entschwinden; [Laut, Stimme:] in der Ferne verklingen
ausbleichen [Vorhang, Teppich, Farbe]Phrasal Verbs:- fade in- fade out* * *(to) (film / video) v.überblenden (auf) v. (to) v.ausblenden v. v.nachlassen v.verblassen v.verklingen v.verwelken v. -
20 enflaquecer
v.1 to make thin.2 to grow thin, to lose weight.3 to get thin, to thin, to lose weight, to slim.* * *1 (poner flaco) to make thin2 figurado (debilitar) to weaken1 (adelgazar) to lose weight, get thin1 (adelgazar) to lose weight, grow thin* * *1.VT (=adelgazar) to make thin; (=debilitar) to weaken, sap the strength of2.VISee:* * *verbo intransitivo to lose weight, get thin* * *verbo intransitivo to lose weight, get thin* * *enflaquecer [E3 ]vito lose weight, get thin* * *♦ vtto make thin♦ vito grow thin, to lose weight* * *I v/t cause to lose weightII v/i lose weight* * *enflaquecer {53} vi: to lose weight, to become thinenflaquecer vt: to emaciate
См. также в других словарях:
lose — [lo͞oz] vt. lost, losing [ME losen, lesen, merging OE losian, to lose, be lost (< los, LOSS) + leosan, to lose, akin to OHG (vir)liosan, Goth (fra)liusan < IE base * leu , to cut off, separate > Gr lyein, to dissolve; L luere, to loose,… … English World dictionary
lose — [luːz] verb lost PTandPP [lɒst ǁ lɒːst] losing PRESPART [transitive] 1. to stop having something any more, or to have less of it: • The industry has lost 60,000 jobs. • After a boardroom battle, Dixon lost control of the company … Financial and business terms
Lose — (l[=oo]z), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Lost} (l[o^]st; 115) p. pr. & vb. n. {Losing} (l[=oo]z [i^]ng).] [OE. losien to loose, be lost, lose, AS. losian to become loose; akin to OE. leosen to lose, p. p. loren, lorn, AS. le[ o]san, p. p. loren (in comp.) … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
'Cause You Are Young — « Cause You Are Young» Sencillo de C.C. Catch del álbum Catch the Catch Lado B One Night s Not Enough (Maxi Version) Formato 7 y 12 single, CD single y Video Grabación 1985 Género(s) … Wikipedia Español
lose face — To lose prestige • • • Main Entry: ↑face lose face see under ↑face • • • Main Entry: ↑lose * * * lose face phrase to no longer impress people or be respected by them, especially by showing that you are not in control of a situation … Useful english dictionary
lose — (v.) O.E. losian be lost, perish, from los destruction, loss, from P.Gmc. *lausa (Cf. O.N. los the breaking up of an army; O.E. forleosan to lose, O.Fris. forliasa, O.S. farliosan, M.Du. verliesen, O.H.G. firliosan, Ger. verlieren … Etymology dictionary
’Cause You Are Young — «’Cause You Are Young» Сингл C.C.Catch из альбома Catch The Catch Выпущен 1985 Формат 7 , 12 Жанр Диско Длительность 4:43 … Википедия
lose — v. (past and past part. lost) 1 tr. be deprived of or cease to have, esp. by negligence or misadventure. 2 tr. a be deprived of (a person, esp. a close relative) by death. b suffer the loss of (a baby) in childbirth. 3 tr. become unable to find;… … Useful english dictionary
lose — verb (lost; losing) Etymology: Middle English, from Old English losian to perish, lose, from los destruction; akin to Old English lēosan to lose; akin to Old Norse losa to loosen, Latin luere to atone for, Greek lyein to loosen, dissolve, destroy … New Collegiate Dictionary
lose — [c]/luz / (say loohz) verb (lost, losing) –verb (t) 1. to come to be without, by some chance, and not know the whereabouts of: to lose a ring. 2. to suffer the loss or deprivation of: to lose one s life. 3. to be bereaved of by death: to lose a… …
lose — /loohz/, v., lost, losing. v.t. 1. to come to be without (something in one s possession or care), through accident, theft, etc., so that there is little or no prospect of recovery: I m sure I ve merely misplaced my hat, not lost it. 2. to fail… … Universalium