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I'll probably lose anyway
The verb lose originated as a derivative of the Old English noun los ‘loss’, which went back ultimately to the same Indo-European source (*lau-, *leu-, lu-) as produced English loose and the suffix -less. In Old English it was losian, which eventually ousted the original lēosan to become the only verb for ‘lose’. The noun los died out before the Middle English period, and was replaced by loss [14], probably a derivative of the past participle lost. The past participle of lēosan ‘lose’ was loren, which survives in forlorn and love-lorn. => LOOSE
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You will win!! Who can see the future?
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English word win comes from Proto-Indo-Iranian *wen-, Proto-Indo-European *wā-, and later Proto-Germanic *winnaną (To fight, strive. To labour, toil. To swink. To win, gain.)
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We should have stopped at "winnana".
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hahaha
I'm trying. There are some real maniacs in this competition.
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as always, those who won t to be the 1st
0 sats \ 1 reply \ @NovaRift 7h
Haha! I saw that too. But to be honest, this is absolutely fun. I'm loving it!
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it s insane in the brain as would have say Cypress Hill