Idioms for loose

Origin of loose

1175–1225; (adj.) Middle English los, loos < Old Norse lauss loose, free, empty; cognate with Old English lēas (see -less), Dutch, German los loose, free; (v.) Middle English leowsen, lousen, derivative of the adj.

OTHER WORDS FROM loose

WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH loose

loose loosen lose loss

British Dictionary definitions for cast loose

Derived forms of loose

loosely, adverb looseness, noun

Word Origin for loose

C13 (in the sense: not bound): from Old Norse lauss free; related to Old English lēas free from, -less

Idioms and Phrases with cast loose (1 of 2)

cast loose

Also, cast adrift. Let go, freed, as in After Rob was suspended from boarding school, he was cast loose with nowhere to go, or Selling her home meant she was cast adrift with no financial ties or responsibilities. Originally a nautical term for releasing a vessel, this idiom was being used figuratively by the late 1500s.

Idioms and Phrases with cast loose (2 of 2)

loose