lose your touch

lose your touch

Useful english dictionary. 2012.

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  • lose your touch — lose (your) touch if you lose your touch, you can no longer do something as well as you could before. It s good to see their goalkeeper s not losing his touch. (usually in continuous tenses) …   New idioms dictionary

  • lose your touch —    If you lose your touch, you no longer have the ability to do something skillfully.     My mother used to make great cup cakes but she seems to have lost her touch …   English Idioms & idiomatic expressions

  • lose your touch — to not be as successful at doing something as you were before You haven t sold anything today. You must be losing your touch …   English dictionary

  • lose your touch — lose some of your skill, lose it    I m losing my touch, he said, looking at his drawing …   English idioms

  • lose — W1S1 [lu:z] v past tense and past participle lost [lɔst US lo:st] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(stop having attitude/quality etc)¦ 2¦(not win)¦ 3¦(cannot find something)¦ 4¦(stop having something)¦ 5¦(death)¦ 6¦(money)¦ 7 have nothing to lose 8¦(time)¦ …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • lose — [ luz ] (past tense and past participle lost [ lɔst ] ) verb *** ▸ 1 stop having something ▸ 2 be unable to find ▸ 3 not win ▸ 4 have less than before ▸ 5 when someone dies ▸ 6 no longer see/hear etc. ▸ 7 not have body part ▸ 8 stop having… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • lose touch — lose (your) touch if you lose your touch, you can no longer do something as well as you could before. It s good to see their goalkeeper s not losing his touch. (usually in continuous tenses) …   New idioms dictionary

  • lose */*/*/ — UK [luːz] / US [luz] verb Word forms lose : present tense I/you/we/they lose he/she/it loses present participle losing past tense lost UK [lɒst] / US [lɔst] past participle lost Get it right: lose: Don t confuse lose (a verb) and loose (an… …   English dictionary

  • touch — touch1 W2S2 [tʌtʃ] v ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(feel)¦ 2¦(no space between)¦ 3 touch something to something 4¦(affect somebody s feelings)¦ 5¦(have an effect)¦ 6¦(use)¦ 7 not touch something 8 not touch somebody/something 9¦(deal with somebody/something)¦ …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • touch — 1 /tVtS/ verb FEEL SB/STH PHYSICALLY 1 (T) to put your hand or another part of your body on something or someone so that you can feel them: Small children are constantly moving and wanting to touch everything. | She couldn t bear the thought of… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

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