loss
/lɑs/
The word carries a heavy emotional weight, often associated with grief, deprivation, or failure. It describes the void left behind when something valuable—be it a person, an object, or money—is gone. In financial contexts, it is clinical and objective, representing a negative balance. In personal contexts, it is deeply subjective and mournful, shifting from a simple 'missing item' to a life-altering event like death. Unlike "deficit," which implies a mathematical shortage, "loss" emphasizes the act of having once possessed something and then losing it.
Uncountable when describing the general state of grief or a decrease in quantity ('a sense of loss', 'loss of appetite'). Countable when referring to specific financial deficits or individual deaths ('the company incurred three major losses this year', 'the war resulted in heavy losses of life').
💬Casual Conversation
Just checked my bank app. This month's spending is a total loss.
Maybe stop blowing your budget on iced coffee and just lock in.
Meanings
Collocations & Compounds
total loss
Noun collocation: the complete destruction or disappearance of something
The insurance company declared the car a total loss after the accident.
heavy loss
Noun collocation: a large amount of money lost or a high number of casualties
The firm suffered a heavy loss during the economic downturn.
net loss
Noun collocation: the total amount of money lost after all expenses are deducted
The startup reported a net loss of one million dollars in its first year.
suffer a loss
Verb collocation: to experience the disappearance or death of something or someone
Many families suffer a loss during the winter flu season.
cut losses
Verb collocation: to stop doing something that is failing to prevent further waste
It was time to cut losses and close the failing branch of the business.
Etymology
Derived from Old English "los," meaning destruction, ruin, or perishment, which stems from the Proto-Germanic root "lus-" meaning to perish. The term evolved from describing total physical destruction to encompassing the general state of deprivation or the specific financial deficit seen in modern commerce.