lost
Webster Dictionary
ruined or destroyed, either physically or morally; past help or hope; as, a ship lost... sea; a woman lost... virtue; a lost soul
|
lost
Webster Dictionary
not perceptible to the senses; no longer visible; as, an island lost... a fog; a person lost... a crowd
|
lost
Webster Dictionary
parted with; no longer held or possessed; as, a lost limb; lost honor
|
lost
Webster Dictionary
hardened beyond sensibility or recovery; alienated; insensible; as, lost... shame; lost... all sense of honor
|
lost
Webster Dictionary
having wandered from, or unable to find, the way; bewildered; perplexed; as, a child lost... the woods; a stranger lost... London
|
retrieval
(recovery, retrieval)
Princeton's WordNet
the act of regaining or saving something lost (or in danger of becoming lost)
|
recovery
(recovery, retrieval)
Princeton's WordNet
the act of regaining or saving something lost (or in danger of becoming lost)
|
losings
(losings, losses)
Princeton's WordNet
something lost (especially money lost... gambling)
|
losses
(losings, losses)
Princeton's WordNet
something lost (especially money lost... gambling)
|
lost
Webster Dictionary
not employed or enjoyed; thrown away; employed ineffectually; wasted; squandered; as, a lost day; a lost opportunity or benefit
|
save
(ɪv)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
to keep from being lost:
|
loss
(ɔs, lɒs)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
something that is lost.
|
sacrifice
(ˈsæk rəˌfaɪs)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
something so surrendered or lost.
|
naught
(ɔt)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
lost...uined.
|
bemuse
(ɪˈmyuz)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
to cause to become lost... thought.
|
recovery
(ɪˈkʌv ə ri)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
the regaining of something lost... taken away.
|
find
(ɪnd)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
to recover (something lost).
|
gone
(ɔn, gɒn)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
lost... hopeless.
|
restoration
(ˌrɛs təˈreɪ ʃən)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
restitution of something taken away or lost.
|
flat
(æt)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
(of a beverage) having lost its effervescence.
|
extant
(ˈɛk stənt, ɪkˈstænt)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
still existing; not destroyed or lost:
|
loss
(ɔs, lɒs)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
an amount or number lost:
|
down
(ʊn)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
having lost the amount indicated, esp. at gambling:
|
abstracted
(æbˈstræk tɪd)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
lost... thought; preoccupied.
|
recoup
(ɪˈkup)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
to get back an equivalent, as of something lost.
|
recover
(ɪˈkʌv ər)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
to get back or regain (something lost... taken away).
|
submerge
(əbˈmɜrdʒ)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
to be covered or lost from sight.
|
decrement
(ˈdɛk rə mənt)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
the amount lost... reduction.
|
cloud
(ʊd)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
to be lost... reverie; be daydreaming.
|
outage
(ˈaʊ tɪdʒ)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
the period during which power is lost.
|
| BTW, Why won't you become an editor? |