To avoid spending (money) so as to keep or accumulate it.
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.
Sports To prevent (a goal) from being scored by an opponent.
To preserve a victory in (a game).
Baseball To preserve (another pitcher's win) by protecting one's team's lead during a stint of relief pitching.
To keep in a safe condition; safeguard.
To prevent the waste or loss of; conserve.
To avoid spending (money) so as to keep or accumulate it.
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.
Sports To prevent (a goal) from being scored by an opponent.
To preserve a victory in (a game).
Baseball To preserve (another pitcher's win) by protecting one's team's lead during a stint of relief pitching.
To set aside for future use; store.
To treat with care by avoiding fatigue, wear, or damage; spare: save one's eyesight.
To make unnecessary; obviate: Your taking the trunk to the attic has saved me an extra trip.
Sports To prevent (a goal) from being scored by an opponent.
To preserve a victory in (a game).
Baseball To preserve (another pitcher's win) by protecting one's team's lead during a stint of relief pitching.
Computer Science To copy (a file) from a computer's main memory to a storage medium.
v.
intr.
To avoid waste or expense; economize.
To accumulate money: saving for a vacation.
To preserve a person or thing from harm or loss.
n.
Sports An act that prevents an opponent from scoring.
Baseball A preservation by a relief pitcher of another pitcher's win.
[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: 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 price for redeeming the hostages was extortionate. Deliver applies to liberating people from something such as misery, peril, error, or evil: "consigned to a state of wretchedness from which no human efforts will deliver them" (George Washington).