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    Miss
    /mis/

    verb

    • 1. fail to hit, reach, or come into contact with (something aimed at): "a laser-guided bomb had missed its target"
    • 2. fail to notice, hear, or understand: "the villa is impossible to miss—it's right by the road" Similar fail to hearfail to take inmishearmisunderstandOpposite seenotice

    noun

    • 1. a failure to hit, catch, or reach something: "Elster's stunning catch in the third inning made up for his dreadful miss in the first"
  2. To miss is to fail to do or sense something, or to be without. If you miss all your free throws, your basketball team probably won't miss you if you skip a game. The verb form of miss stems from the Old English missan “fail to hit what was aimed at,” while the noun form of miss , meaning a term of honor to a young woman is just the ...

  3. Check pronunciation: miss. Definition of miss verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  4. miss. verb. uk / mɪs / us. miss verb (FEEL SAD) Add to word list. A2. to feel sad about someone that you do not see now or something that you do not have or do now: I'll miss you when you go. [ + doing sth ] He misses having a room of his own. Fewer examples. We will miss her greatly. He will be sorely missed by everyone.

  5. 5 days ago · If you miss something, you feel sad because you no longer have it or are no longer doing or experiencing it.

  6. to regret the absence or loss of: I miss you all dreadfully. to escape or avoid: He just missed being caught. to fail to perceive or understand: to miss the point of a remark.

  7. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English miss1 /mɪs/ S1 W2 verb 1 not do something [ transitive] to not go somewhere or do something, especially when you want to but cannot I’m absolutely starving – I missed lunch. He missed 20 games after breaking a bone in his wrist.

  8. n. [ countable] a failure of any kind, esp. to hit something: a couple of swings and misses and the game is over. a misfire. Idioms miss the boat, Informal. to fail to take advantage of an opportunity: He missed the boat by failing to apply for the grant. miss2 /mɪs/ n., pl. miss•es.

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