Loss

Webster's Dictionary of the English Language

·vt Failure to use advantageously; as, loss of time.

II. Loss ·vt Failure to gain or win; as, loss of a race or battle.

III. Loss ·vt Killed, wounded, and captured persons, or captured property.

IV. Loss ·vt The state of being lost or destroyed; especially, the wreck or foundering of a ship or other vessel.

V. Loss ·vt The state of losing or having lost; the privation, defect, misfortune, harm, ·etc., which ensues from losing.

VI. Loss ·vt The act of losing; failure; destruction; privation; as, the loss of property; loss of money by gaming; loss of health or reputation.

VII. Loss ·vt That which is lost or from which one has parted; waste;

— opposed to gain or increase; as, the loss of liquor by leakage was considerable.

VIII. Loss ·vt Destruction or diminution of value, if brought about in a manner provided for in the insurance contract (as destruction by fire or wreck, damage by water or smoke), or the death or injury of an insured person; also, the sum paid or payable therefor; as, the losses of the company this year amount to a million of dollars.

Related Words

  • loss

    Total loss is the insurance recovered under peril, according to the invoice price of the goods when ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • Core loss

    ·add. ·- Energy wasted by hysteresis or eddy currents in the core of an armature, transformer, ·etc....

    Webster's Dictionary of the English Language

  • salvage loss

    A term in marine insurance implying that the underwriters are liable to pay the amount insured on th...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • total loss

    A term in marine insurance, implying that the underwriters are to pay the amount insured without sal...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • constructive total loss

    When the repair of damage sustained by the perils of the sea would cost more than the ship would be ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • fire, loss by

    Is within the policy of insurance, whether it be by accident, or by the fault of the master or marin...

    The Sailor's Word-Book