Transcription
-
- US Pronunciation
- US IPA
- UK Pronunciation
- UK IPA
-
- [seyv]
- /seɪv/
- /seɪv/
-
- US Pronunciation
- US IPA
-
- [seyv]
- /seɪv/
Definitions of saved word
- verb with object saved to rescue from danger or possible harm, injury, or loss: to save someone from drowning. 1
- verb with object saved to keep safe, intact, or unhurt; safeguard; preserve: God save the king. 1
- verb with object saved to keep from being lost: to save the game. 1
- verb with object saved to avoid the spending, consumption, or waste of: to save fuel. 1
- verb with object saved to keep, as for reuse: to save leftovers for tomorrow's dinner. 1
- verb with object saved to set aside, reserve, or lay by: to save money. 1
Information block about the term
Origin of saved
First appearance:
before 1175 One of the 8% oldest English words
1175-1225; Middle English sa(u)ven < Old French sauver < Late Latin salvāre to save; see safe
Historical Comparancy
Parts of speech for Saved
noun
adjective
verb
adverb
pronoun
preposition
conjunction
determiner
exclamation
saved popularity
A common word. It’s meaning is known to most children of preschool age. About 98% of English native speakers know the meaning and use the word.
Most Europeans know this English word. The frequency of it’s usage is somewhere between "mom" and "screwdriver".
saved usage trend in Literature
This diagram is provided by Google Ngram ViewerSynonyms for saved
adj saved
- blessed — If someone is blessed with a particular good quality or skill, they have that good quality or skill.
adjective saved
- accumulated — to gather or collect, often in gradual degrees; heap up: to accumulate wealth.
- amassed — to gather for oneself; collect as one's own: to amass a huge amount of money.
- cured — (of food) treated by salting, smoking, or drying in order to preserve it
- deposited — to place for safekeeping or in trust, especially in a bank account: He deposited his paycheck every Friday.
- enthroned — Formally placed in a position.
Antonyms for saved
adj saved
- all gone — finished, used up
- all in — If you say that you are all in, you mean that you are extremely tired.
- all over — All over a place means in every part of it.
- awol — If someone in the Armed Forces goes AWOL, they leave their post without the permission of a superior officer. AWOL is an abbreviation for 'absent without leave'.
- bankrupt — People or organizations that go bankrupt do not have enough money to pay their debts.
verb saved
- abused — Simple past tense and past participle of abuse.
- allegorized — Simple past tense and past participle of allegorize.
- annihilated — to reduce to utter ruin or nonexistence; destroy utterly: The heavy bombing almost annihilated the city.
- annulled — (especially of laws or other established rules, usages, etc.) to make void or null; abolish; cancel; invalidate: to annul a marriage.
- ate — Ate is the past tense of eat.
adjective saved
- exhausted — Drained of one's physical or mental resources; very tired.
- limp — to walk with a labored, jerky movement, as when lame.
- nonextant — Not extant.
- out — away from, or not in, the normal or usual place, position, state, etc.: out of alphabetical order; to go out to dinner.
- worn — past participle of wear.
Top questions with saved
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