We’re back! And to make up for our extended hiatus, we’re coming back with three different illustrations this week.
Loose: not tight or snug; not bound or contained; unrestrained; free or released from fastening or attachment.
Loose first appears in the early 1300s, from the Old Norse lauss “loose, free, vacant, dissolute.”
Lose comes from the Old English losian, meaning “be lost, perish,” which goes all the way back to the Latin luere, “to loosen, release, atone for.” Lose (meaning “to misplace”) originates around 1200, while lose (“to not win”) first appears around 1500.
This post was last modified on February 19, 2021 10:34 am
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