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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a double loser" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe someone who has failed in two significant ways or contexts, often implying a lack of success or poor judgment.
Example: "After losing both the job opportunity and the competition, he felt like a double loser."
Alternatives: "a total failure" or "a complete loser".
Exact(2)
John Henry could be a double loser, too.
"I was kicked by my staff, who said, 'Oy, wake up,' and by my daughters, who called me a double loser," he said, splaying both thumbs and forefingers into L-shapes, and smacking them against his forehead.
Similar(58)
That, in the genetic lottery, she was a double-loser.
It is a pretty double loser-on-loser to establish an extra trick.
Then you sing "Loser" again and hold up the other hand in an L. As you sing the next line -- Double loser!
Double loser.
The great double losers of the day were the Lib Dems, poll-axed by the end of their reform dream.
He is a loser in a double sense.
In NHRA rules, the loser in a double disqualification is the one with the most grievous foul.
A double.
And yet behold, here we find the loser of losers sitting on a double-digit advantage in one new poll, and up by 9 per cent in another.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com