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Discover LudwigThe phrase "afraid to loose" is not correct; it should be "afraid to lose." You can use it when expressing fear or anxiety about the possibility of losing something important.
Example: "She was afraid to lose her job after the company announced layoffs."
Alternatives: "fearful of losing" or "worried about losing."
Exact(2)
Later, they tell me they tried to bring her inside but she wouldn't leave her spot, afraid to loose her place in line.
Many GPs however, are still reluctant to go towards a closer relationship with the hospitals' EDs, mainly because they are afraid to loose their identity and autonomy as GP.
Similar(58)
If you are at any point afraid to let loose around your partner then there is a problem.
Don't be afraid to let loose a little.
Afraid to lose, afraid to feel, afraid to be human.
It is afraid to let loose.
Which is not to say that Ms. Tharp is afraid to cut loose.
Or the one who stumbled through last season, afraid to cut loose in the running game yet simultaneously unable to decipher NFL defenses when he tried to drop back and pass?
As Cole Porter, he wanders around in "Night and Day" looking politely oblivious; he's afraid to cut loose and be himself, yet he's too constrained to suggest anything resembling Cole Porter, so the hero seems to have a sickly, joyless nature.
They're gifts for the young at heart and the person not afraid to let loose.
Years before his recent heavy-metal resurgence, ever-elegant Mr. Lee was not afraid to cut loose and rock out! (Warning: This cannot be unseen, nor can it be unheard. And I loooooooove it).
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com