Buncha Loosers

If you leave aside "you", "your", "you're" and their horrid text messaging-inspired truncations, then Loose for Lose is probably the most popular misspelling of all. I know there's not a lot here, but quite frankly they are a bit boring to collect as they are so common. "Loosly" is pretty choice, though. - Ghielschutter

• This is loosly based ona real case study.

• Mine is a passion so I can see your point on loosing the rear vision with the rag top.

• If you find you don't need the TS, then loose the accessories.

• The good news is if I loose it I already have a back up.

• In the future I'll be sure to plan for tabs to keep from loosing the piece into the tank.

• OK, don't loose any time now and let them engineer that electrical car that is light…

And now, an entire paragraph with looses planted all over it like landmines. Courtesy of Bruce W:

Sharpness of Sheet Film vs Roll Film
From a mechanical standpoint, you loose some and you gain some. You loose when you decouple the lens from the camera body. You loose when you aren't using roll film that you can keep under tension. You loose a bit more as your film size goes up but your base thickness stays the same. You loose a little because your LF lenses aren't as sharp as the smaller format lenses. You loose a little because LF forces you to shot at smaller f/stops and corresponding slower shutter speeds. And film area is sufficient for huge prints from moderate enlargement factors, meaning that what sharpness you might loose, doesn't show in the prints.