lose+time

  • 61Time Slip — Infobox VG title = Time Slip developer = Sales Curve Interactive publisher = Vic Tokai designer = engine = released = November 1993 genre = Platform modes = ratings = platforms = Super Nintendo Entertainment System media = requirements = input =… …

    Wikipedia

  • 62lose — verb 1 not keep ADVERB ▪ forever VERB + LOSE ▪ be about to, be going to, be likely to, stand to ▪ The company stands to lose if this deal falls through …

    Collocations dictionary

  • 63lose — 01. She [lost] her purse somewhere and can t find it. 02. We [lost] the game 2 1. 03. If we [lose] this next game, we will be out of the tournament. 04. He always [loses] his arguments with the boss so I don t know why he even tries. 05. I m… …

    Grammatical examples in English

  • 64lose track of time —    When you give all your attention to something and become so engrossed in it that you don t realize what time it is, you lose track of time.     Whenever I start surfing on the web, I lose track of time …

    English Idioms & idiomatic expressions

  • 65Time Out of Mind — This article is about the Bob Dylan album. For other uses, see Time Out of Mind (disambiguation). Time Out of Mind Studio album by Bob Dylan …

    Wikipedia

  • 66Lose it — 1. no longer have that quality which made one specially able or talented; 2. lose control of one s temper: Mum really lost it when I pranged the car ; 3. lose control of a vehicle: lost it big time coming round that last bend ; 4. lose the plot …

    Dictionary of Australian slang

  • 67lose it — Australian Slang 1. no longer have that quality which made one specially able or talented; 2. lose control of one s temper: Mum really lost it when I pranged the car ; 3. lose control of a vehicle: lost it big time coming round that last bend ; 4 …

    English dialects glossary

  • 68lose your cherry —    (of a woman)    to copulate for the first time    The cherry is the maidenhead:     In thirty years you can get born, grow up, go to college, lose your cherry, have a couple of kids. (Diehl, 1978)    The obsolete Scottish lose your snood meant …

    How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms

  • 69lose one’s grip — AND lose one’s hold tv. o lose one’s control over something. □ When I begin to lose my grip, I will just quit. □ I’m losing my hold. It must be time to chuck it …

    Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions

  • 70lose track — verb fail to keep informed or aware She has so many books, she just lost track and cannot find this volume • Ant: ↑keep track • Hypernyms: ↑fail, ↑neglect • Verb Frames: Somebody s …

    Useful english dictionary