save 1
(sāv)v. saved, sav·ing, saves
v.tr.1. a. To rescue from harm, danger, or loss: The lifeguard saved the struggling swimmer.
b. To prevent from dying: The doctors saved the patient.
c. To set free from the consequences of sin; redeem: prayed to save his soul.
2. To keep in a safe or healthy condition: God save King Richard!
3. a. To hold back for future use: saved his best song for the encore.
b. To avoid spending (money) so as to keep or accumulate it.
c. To avoid spending (money or time) in an amount less than what circumstances normally require: saved $25 at the sale; saved 15 minutes by taking a shortcut.
d. To prevent the waste or loss of; conserve: bought an efficient device that saves electricity.
e. To treat with care by avoiding fatigue, wear, or damage; spare: wore sunglasses to save his eyesight.
4. a. To make unnecessary; obviate: By carrying two bags you can save an extra trip.
b. To spare (someone) from having to do something.
5. a. Sports To prevent (a goal) from being scored by blocking a shot. Used of a goalie.
b. To prevent an opponent from scoring (a point).
c. To preserve a victory in (a game).
d. Baseball To preserve (another pitcher's win) by protecting one's team's lead during a stint of relief pitching.
6. Computers To copy (a file) from a computer's main memory to a disk or other storage medium.
v.intr.1. To avoid waste or expense; economize.
2. To accumulate money: saving for a vacation.
3. To preserve a person or thing from harm or loss.
n.1. Sports An act that prevents a ball or puck from entering a goal.
2. Baseball A preservation by a relief pitcher of another pitcher's win.
Idiom: save (one's) breath To refrain from a futile appeal or effort: Save your breath; you can't dissuade them.
[Middle English
saven, from Old French
sauver, from Late Latin
salvāre, from Latin
salvus,
safe; see
sol- in
Indo-European roots.]
sav′a·ble, save′a·ble adj.
sav′er n.
Synonyms: save1, rescue, reclaim, redeem, deliver
These verbs mean freeing a person or thing from danger, evil, confinement, or servitude. Save is the most general: The smallpox vaccine has saved many lives. A police officer saved the tourist from being cheated. Rescue usually implies saving from immediate harm or danger by direct action: rescue a rare manuscript from a fire. Reclaim can mean to bring a person back, as from error to virtue or to right or proper conduct: "To reclaim me from this course of life was the sole cause of his journey to London" (Henry Fielding).
To redeem is to free someone from captivity or the consequences of sin or error; the term can imply the expenditure of money or effort: The amount paid to redeem the captured duke was enormous. Deliver applies to liberating people from something such as captivity, misery, or peril: "consigned to a state of wretchedness from which no human efforts will deliver them" (George Washington).
save 2
(sāv)prep. With the exception of; except: "No man enjoys self-reproach save a masochist" (Philip Wylie).
conj.1. Were it not; except: The house would be finished by now, save that we had difficulty contracting a roofer.
2. Unless.
[Middle English, from Old French
sauf, from Latin
salvō, ablative sing. of
salvus,
safe; see
sol- in
Indo-European roots.]
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
save
(seɪv) vb1. (tr) to rescue, preserve, or guard (a person or thing) from danger or harm
2. to avoid the spending, waste, or loss of (money, possessions, etc)
3. (Theology) (tr) to deliver from sin; redeem
4. (often foll by up) to set aside or reserve (money, goods, etc) for future use
5. (tr) to treat with care so as to avoid or lessen wear or degeneration: use a good light to save your eyes.
6. (tr) to prevent the necessity for; obviate the trouble of: good work now will save future revision.
7. (General Sporting Terms) (tr) sport to prevent (a goal) by stopping (a struck ball or puck)
8. (intr) chiefly US (of food) to admit of preservation; keep
n9. (General Sporting Terms) sport the act of saving a goal
10. (Computer Science) computing an instruction to write information from the memory onto a tape or disk
[C13: from Old French salver, via Late Latin from Latin salvus safe]
ˈsavable, ˈsaveable adj
ˈsavableness, ˈsaveableness n
ˈsaver n
save
(seɪv) prep (often foll by for) Also: saving with the exception of
[C13 sauf, from Old French, from Latin salvō, from salvus safe]
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
save1
(seɪv)
v. saved, sav•ing,
n. v.t. 1. to rescue from danger or possible harm or loss.
2. to keep safe, intact, or unhurt; safeguard: God save the United States.
3. to keep from being lost: tried to save the game.
4. to avoid the spending, consumption, or waste of: to save fuel.
5. to set aside, reserve, or lay by: to save money.
6. to treat carefully in order to reduce wear, fatigue, etc.
7. to prevent the occurrence, use, or necessity of; obviate.
8. to deliver from the power and consequences of sin.
9. to copy (computer data) onto a hard or floppy disk, a tape, etc.
10. to stop (a ball or puck) from entering one's goal.
v.i. 11. to lay up money as the result of economy or thrift.
12. to be economical in expenditure.
13. to preserve something from harm, loss, etc.
n. 14. a goalkeeper's act of preventing a goal.
15. (in baseball) a statistical credit given a relief pitcher for preserving a team's victory by holding its lead.
[1175–1225; Middle English
sa(u)ven < Old French
sauver < Late Latin
salvāre to save, derivative of Latin salvus
safe, unharmed]
sav′a•ble, save′a•ble, adj.
sav′er, n.
save2
(seɪv)
prep. 1. except; but: They all left save one.
conj. 2. except; but: He would have gone, save that he had no money for travel.
[1250–1300; Middle English; variant of
safe]
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.