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Defeats

Defeats is the plural noun form of defeat and the third-person singular present tense of the verb defeat. As a noun, a defeat is a loss in a contest, battle, or other challenge; as a verb, to defeat means to win against, to prevent the success of, or to cause the failure of an opponent or objective. The term can also describe thwarting a plan or policy, such as defeating a bill or defeating an argument.

Etymology: Defeat derives from Old French defait (defait), from des- 'un-' + fait 'made, done', meaning undone.

Usage: In sports, defeats refer to multiple losses. In military history, defeats denote losses in battles. In

Synonyms and related terms include loss, setback, rout for the noun; beat, conquer, thwart, foil for the

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Through
Middle
English,
the
sense
broadened
from
undoing
to
overthrow
or
overcoming
in
competition.
law
and
politics,
to
defeat
a
measure
is
to
prevent
its
passage
or
adoption.
Idioms
include
"defeats
the
purpose,"
or
"the
defense
defeats
the
attack,"
depending
on
context.
verb.
Antonyms
include
victory
and
success.
The
term
is
widely
used
in
journalism,
history,
and
policy
analysis
as
a
neutral
descriptor
of
outcomes
where
one
side
fails
to
achieve
its
objectives.