Miss

Miss: I missed the train by 5 minutes (the train left 5 minutes before I arrived).

I am not a good shooter, I miss the target most of the time.

I will miss you while you will be away. I will be lonely. I cannot wait until you come back.

Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary
miss (verb)
transitive verb
1.
to fail to hit, reach, or contact - miss the target
2.
to discover or feel the absence of
3.
to fail to obtain
4.
- escape avoid just missed hitting the other car
5.
to leave out - omit
6.
to fail to comprehend, sense, or experience - missed the point of the speech
7.
intransitive verb
to fail to perform or attend - had to miss school for a week
1.
archaic to fail to get, reach, or do something
2.
to fail to hit something
3.
a) to be unsuccessful
b) - misfire the engine missed
miss (noun)
1.
chiefly dialect disadvantage or regret resulting from loss - we know the miss of you, and even hunger … to see you Samuel Richardson
2.
a) a failure to hit
b) a failure to attain a desired result
3.
- misfire
miss (noun)
1.
capitalized
a) - used as a title prefixed to the name of an unmarried woman or girl
b) - used before the name of a place or of a line of activity or before some epithet to form a title for a usually young unmarried female who is representative of the thing indicated Miss America
2.
young lady - used without a name as a conventional term of address to a young woman
3.
a young unmarried woman or girl
4.
a clothing size for women of average height and build
Miss (abbreviation)
- Mississippi