Englishfor English speakers
lose
Verb
—
When you lose something, you don't know where it is.
The boy lost his book some place between home and school.
The man has lost his keys and was locked out of the house.
—
In games, you lose when others do better than you.
He lost the card game because he didn't know the rules.
fighting
—
noun
(= fight, scrap)
the act of fighting; any contest or struggle
a fight broke out at the hockey game
there was fighting in the streets
the unhappy couple got into a terrible scrap
—
adjective
(= active, combat-ready)
engaged in or ready for military or naval operations
on active duty
the platoon is combat-ready
review the fighting forces
spirit
Noun
—
A spirit is a being that has no physical body, and cannot usually be seen or touched.
The people on the island believed in many gods and spirits that affected life.
—
A spirit is a part of you that cannot be seen or touched. Often this is important to religion and different from the soul (religions do not agree what the difference is).
They tried to talk to the spirit of their dead mother through a medium.
The preacher claimed the soul was the mind but the spirit was something more special.
—
If you have spirit, you are very excited about something or a very strong supporter.
People with school spirit always cheer for their schools team.
—
The spirit of a statement or rule is the idea or purpose for it.
What she did fit the spirit of the law, even though it brought the law as it was written.
In the spirit of fairness I let the younger children break some rules.
The spirit of the agreement was that we would have equal shares.
—
A spirit is a volatile liquid, like alcohol.
spirit
Verb
—
If you spirit something, you carry it away, usually in secret or mystery.
spirit
Proper noun
—
Another name for the Holy Spirit (also called the Holy Ghost).