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"Losing" is a form of "losing", an adjective which is often translated as "perdedor". "Lose" is a transitive verb which is often translated as "perder". Learn more about the difference between "lose" and "losing" below.
lose(
luz
)A transitive verb is a verb that requires a direct object (e.g., I bought a book.).
2. (to not win)
a. perder
She lost the race despite all the training she'd done.Perdió la carrera, a pesar de haber entrenado tanto.
a. perder (rights, sight, a loved one)
She lost her parents when she was 12.Perdió a sus padres cuando tenía 12.
b. bajar
You lost ten pounds in a week? That seems dangerous to me.¿Bajaste diez libras en una semana? Eso me parece peligroso.
c. deshacerse de (a pursuer)
I managed to lose him by dodging down a side alley.Conseguí deshacerme de él entrando en un callejón lateral.
5. (to waste)
a. perder (time or an opportunity)
I've lost a lot of sleep thinking about this.He perdido muchas horas de sueño pensando en esto.
7. (to confuse)
a. confundir
She lost me when she started explaining fractions.Me confundió cuando empezó a explicar fracciones.
a. atrasarse
The kitchen clock loses two minutes every day.El reloj de la cocina se atrasa dos minutos cada día.
a. perder
She lost some clients over the past weeks.Ha perdido algunos clientes durante las últimas semanas.
An intransitive verb is one that does not require a direct object (e.g., The man sneezed.).
losing(
lu
-
zihng
)An adjective is a word that describes a noun (e.g., the big dog).
1. (defeated)
losings
A plural noun indicates that there is more than one person, place, thing, or idea.
2. (money lost)
a. pérdidas (in gambling)
Despondency over heavy losings caused him to become a drunkard.El abatimiento que le provocaron sus enormes pérdidas hizo que se volviera alcohólico.