lose your touch

lose your touch
lose (your) touch if you lose your touch, you can no longer do something as well as you could before.

It's good to see their goalkeeper's not losing his touch.

(usually in continuous tenses)

New idioms dictionary. 2014.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • lose your touch —    If you lose your touch, you no longer have the ability to do something skillfully.     My mother used to make great cup cakes but she seems to have lost her touch …   English Idioms & idiomatic expressions

  • lose your touch — to not be as successful at doing something as you were before You haven t sold anything today. You must be losing your touch …   English dictionary

  • lose your touch — lose some of your skill, lose it    I m losing my touch, he said, looking at his drawing …   English idioms

  • lose your touch — …   Useful english dictionary

  • lose — W1S1 [lu:z] v past tense and past participle lost [lɔst US lo:st] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(stop having attitude/quality etc)¦ 2¦(not win)¦ 3¦(cannot find something)¦ 4¦(stop having something)¦ 5¦(death)¦ 6¦(money)¦ 7 have nothing to lose 8¦(time)¦ …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • lose — [ luz ] (past tense and past participle lost [ lɔst ] ) verb *** ▸ 1 stop having something ▸ 2 be unable to find ▸ 3 not win ▸ 4 have less than before ▸ 5 when someone dies ▸ 6 no longer see/hear etc. ▸ 7 not have body part ▸ 8 stop having… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • lose touch — lose (your) touch if you lose your touch, you can no longer do something as well as you could before. It s good to see their goalkeeper s not losing his touch. (usually in continuous tenses) …   New idioms dictionary

  • lose */*/*/ — UK [luːz] / US [luz] verb Word forms lose : present tense I/you/we/they lose he/she/it loses present participle losing past tense lost UK [lɒst] / US [lɔst] past participle lost Get it right: lose: Don t confuse lose (a verb) and loose (an… …   English dictionary

  • touch — touch1 W2S2 [tʌtʃ] v ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(feel)¦ 2¦(no space between)¦ 3 touch something to something 4¦(affect somebody s feelings)¦ 5¦(have an effect)¦ 6¦(use)¦ 7 not touch something 8 not touch somebody/something 9¦(deal with somebody/something)¦ …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • touch — 1 /tVtS/ verb FEEL SB/STH PHYSICALLY 1 (T) to put your hand or another part of your body on something or someone so that you can feel them: Small children are constantly moving and wanting to touch everything. | She couldn t bear the thought of… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

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