1 to stop having someone or something that you had before -- stracić
2 to have less of something than you had before -- stracić
3 If you lose a game, competition, or election, the team or person that you are competing with wins. -- przegrać
4 to stop feeling something good -- stracić wiarę/zainteresowanie/cierpliwość itp.
5 If you lose a number of hours or days, you cannot work during this time. -- tracić
6 If a clock loses time, it goes slower than it should. -- spóźniać się
7 to confuse someone so that they do not understand something -- namieszać, zdezorientować
No, you've lost me there - can you explain that again?
8 to take something away, usually because it looks bad. -- wyrzucić
Lose the belt, Andrea, it looks ridiculous with that dress.
9 to fall because you are leaning too much to one side -- stracić równowagę
11 to die -- stracić życie
But why should it be lost with lesions in the ventromesial quadrant of the frontal lobes?
Only nine subjects actively refused to participate in the study; the others were lost to follow-up or failed to return the consent form.
Such a perception prompts people to ask whether something valuable is lost when non-market modes of interaction are replaced by market ones.
In addition, 5 participants died, 5 participants reported being too ill to participate, and 3 were lost due to relocation or other reasons.
It remains to be seen why (43) loses its validity for long times.
Many of the pages are blank; others were removed and subsequently have been lost.
Although a second piano part has not survived, one feels again that a real opportunity to prompt further research has been lost.
The editors have striven to give the floor to competing points of view without losing technical focus.