1. This is for you, honey. Go ahead! eat!
2. Enough. My mouth is full.
3. Can you find it?
4. Ohh oh!!! all gone. What can we do now?
5. Go ahead take them all.
6. Did you have fun today?
7. There is nothing.
8. I bet you will lose it again.
Permalink Reply by Jija on October 9, 2009 at 11:29am
1. Thank you honey, that's very sweet but I'm full. You can have it
2. Wait, hold on, my mouth is full now. Give me sometime to chew it first
3. Can you find it?
4. It's all gone so what do we do now
5. You can have it
6. Did you have a good time?
7. Nothing to see at all
8. You're gonna loose it again ถ้าเปลี่ยนเป็นว่า Can you promise to look after it well ดีกว่ามั้ยคะ
The words loose and lose are mixed up in writing; for some reason, many people write loose when they really mean lose. But there's no reason to lose your mind worrying about this, just lose the extra o!
Loose
Loose is an adjective, the opposite of tight or contained.
My shoes are loose
I have a loose tooth
There's a dog running loose in the street
Lose
Lose is a verb that means to suffer the loss of, to miss.
I win! You lose!
Don't lose your keys
I never lose bets
The Bottom Line
Simple carelessness leads people to write loose when they mean lose. Just remember that lose has one o, and loose has two. Start with loose, lose an o, and what do you get? Lose!