A Lost Cause


🗓️ Idiom: A Lost Cause (n)


💬 Meaning

  • A situation with no chance of success.
  • Something that cannot be saved, fixed, or improved.

🧠 Example Sentences

  • He felt the interview was a lost cause after he answered the first question badly.
  • She kept trying to fix her résumé, but the old format was a lost cause.
  • The candidate thought the interview was a lost cause, but the company still called him back.

🏛️ Origin

The phrase comes from older English and European expressions referring to causes or goals that could not succeed, no matter the effort. Today, it simply means something hopeless or impossible to improve.


📝 Practice Exercises

1. Fill in the blank

After missing the key question, Mark felt the interview was __________.

Answer

a lost cause

2. Multiple choice

What does “a lost cause” mean?
a) Something that still has a good chance
b) Something with no hope of success
c) Something that is easy to fix

Answer

b) Something with no hope of success

3. Change the sentence using “a lost cause”

“She felt there was no chance of saving the interview.”

Answer

She felt the interview was a lost cause.


ℹ️ Other Useful Pages


📚 Learning Resources

👉 Job Interview Idioms
👉 Business English Idioms List

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