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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
preserve
I.verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a male preserve (=something that only men have been involved with)
▪ Motor-racing has largely been a male preserve.
maintain/preserve/defend the status quo (=not make any changes)
▪ Will the West use its influence to maintain the status quo and not disrupt the flow of oil?
preserve/record/keep etc sth for posterity
▪ a priceless work of art that must be kept for posterity
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
well
▪ Apart from this the frescos were particularly well preserved.
▪ Those of Anne Hutchinson are well preserved.
▪ This is why the buildings in the area are so well preserved.
▪ Her face is quite handsome and well preserved.
▪ The architecture of the gland crypts was well preserved and there was mild goblet cell mucous depletion.
▪ Some of the mummies had long, dark hair and incredibly well preserved faces, even an almost fair complexion.
▪ Some fossils are exceptionally well preserved.
■ NOUN
attempt
▪ Dorothy's own attempt to preserve something from those final Somerset months produced a document more private, but hardly less remarkable.
▪ No attempt was made to preserve the bodies.
▪ The Movement recognised this, as it also recognised that administrative pressures were working against a concerted attempt to preserve religious unity.
▪ The rate of heart contractions increases in an attempt to preserve blood flow to the vital organs.
▪ It was an attempt to preserve her objectivity, but it could not suppress a rising panic.
balance
▪ I know that it is unnecessary to rip animals to pieces to preserve the balance of nature.
▪ The President urged the Premier to preserve the existing balance of power in arms and geography.
▪ He believed that liberty was best preserved by maintaining the balance implicit in the guiding legal principles of the constitution.
body
▪ Huy hoped that the embalmers knew their job, and had preserved the bodies well.
▪ The body was thoroughly examined by physicians, who declared that no chemicals had been used to preserve it.
▪ No attempt was made to preserve the bodies.
▪ He loved life and wished to preserve his body.
▪ Undoubtedly the most modern method devised to preserve human bodies might well be said to belong to the realm of science fiction.
▪ Still preserved at the Monastero Montevergine is the perfectly preserved body of the Beata.
▪ The embalmer washes the body with germicidal soap and replaces the blood with embalming fluid to preserve the body.
character
▪ It is astonishing that it should have preserved its character so well when it is close to Zurich.
▪ Their devotion to simple lifestyles and preserving the frontier character of their town is heartening.
▪ Similarly, any proposed redevelopment or new building must actively enhance or preserve the character or appearance of the conservation area.
▪ Is it possible to change school science in this fashion and still preserve the essential character of science itself?
▪ We want to preserve the special character of our old town and city centres.
▪ The admissions policy adopted by the school was designed to preserve the character of the school as a Roman Catholic school.
effort
▪ Yet these efforts to preserve tradition by isolating society from Western influence were doomed to failure.
▪ They encourage efforts to preserve that potential, and urge continued co-operation in this area.
▪ The trip celebrated a 20-year effort to preserve the rail route.
▪ She urged them to continue their efforts to preserve affirmative action.
environment
▪ If we use energy efficiently, we help preserve our environment, and save money, too.
▪ Team leader Alan Smith said the nursery was committed to preserving the environment so it did not use peat materials or chemicals.
▪ She recommends that they should be felled and new trees planted to preserve the environment.
▪ One day it could be used by the timber trade as a guide for preserving the environment which pays their wages.
▪ They, and the schools we went to, helped preserve a brown Fifties environment all through our early years.
family
▪ Substitute care was seen as supporting parents as well as providing for children's needs, and practical assistance as preserving the family unit.
▪ He felt that to have any chance of preserving the family tradition, a single individual must inherit.
▪ Creevey's fame is based on the amusing letters which were preserved by the Ord family.
▪ Conservatives would like to preserve traditional family roles so that women are discouraged from market-based work.
heritage
▪ Not only would purchasers be preserving the province's heritage, they would be gaining a worthwhile investment.
▪ Small countries if they wish to preserve their national heritage have something serious to worry about.
▪ The National Trust and private owners take a leading part in preserving our almost unrivalled heritage.
▪ Churchill fought the Second World War to preserve the heritage of Britain.
▪ A positive consequence of this is that the church has preserved her spiritual heritage and also maintained her community base.
▪ What they learn in school about writing helps to preserve and reclaim that heritage.
▪ Here the double emphasis upon the need to arrest cultural degeneration and preserve the national heritage was distinctly in evidence.
identity
▪ The legislation was largely inspired by the priority which the regional parties gave to preserving local cultural identities.
▪ If they do not, they can not preserve their identities or raise children to have both independent and family lives.
▪ Alas, Mr Prosser must preserve his identity, not his disfigurement.
▪ We have seen, after all, that there is no significance in preserving the identity of any particular atom.
▪ The other necessary component was the deceased's name, which through its power could preserve life and identity.
▪ If any country wishes to preserve its identity it must have control of immigration.
▪ It argued that some extra form of local taxation was needed if local government was to preserve its separate identity.
independence
▪ It can be justified as preserving the independence of the organisation, and the freedom of action to perform its functions.
▪ To preserve independence, Fed governors enjoy secure terms of fourteen years.
▪ She preserved her dignity, independence and way of life.
▪ Through buying the Observer, he preserved the independence of Garvin.
▪ Most of us seek to preserve independence in matters in which the bodily functions of urinating and excreting are concerned.
▪ This was based on an explicit philosophy of preserving the dignity and independence of patients.
▪ This policy preserved the independence of the smaller breweries.
▪ And shareholders should not underestimate the determination of the Jaguar management to preserve its independence.
integrity
▪ This is a key factor in preserving the Panel's integrity and independence from the judiciary.
▪ And to preserve its integrity, the online magazine refuses advertising.
▪ She has not double-glazed the house in order to preserve its architectural integrity.
▪ We are trying to preserve the integrity of the chief inspector.
life
▪ This has encouraged manufacturers to doctor products with additives to preserve their shelf life.
▪ Unselflslmess preserves life, whereas love of the ego kills it.
▪ Male speaker It's my duty to uphold the law and preserve life.
▪ People can retell and record their stories, preserving the life they knew for those they leave behind.
▪ The other necessary component was the deceased's name, which through its power could preserve life and identity.
▪ After the three hour charge-up, the pack is automatically switched over to normal charging, to preserve the battery life.
▪ This is so not withstanding the very strong public interest in preserving the life and health of all citizens.
▪ Taekwondo exists to preserve life, not to take it.
order
▪ They need to classify their specimens in order to preserve them.
▪ Thus through family stories is the social order announced, and preserved through them as well.
▪ This set of keys is intended to be random and so has no order to preserve.
peace
▪ Often, in order to preserve peace, she would wander off in the opposite direction, to keep out of trouble.
▪ It was designed only to insure safety against attack and to preserve peace.
▪ To try to preserve industrial peace and control wage inflation governments were forced to adopt a carrot-and-stick approach to the trade unions.
▪ Enable them to see that it is their interest to preserve peace and order, and they will preserve them.
▪ It wants to be efficient and competitive and to preserve social peace and the cohesion of the state with society.
posterity
▪ This wise precaution preserved the Garden for posterity.
▪ It was preserved for posterity with David's Mum smiling away - bless her heart.
record
▪ She lived for many years, and preserved a record that she had been treated with Penicillium.
▪ It was intercepted by the Confederates, who read it with enjoyment and preserved it for the record.
▪ Philip Leapor's surprisingly well-formed script is preserved in the records of the Brackley corporation.
▪ In any case provision is made for preserving a record of every marriage celebrated in the country.
▪ Edgware lead the Division Three table by a single point from Tilbury whose 2-1 win against Hornchurch preserved their unbeaten home record.
status
▪ During these times it was the unchristian practice of most priests to preserve the status quo by backing the king and nobles.
▪ To compensate, and, anxious to preserve his patriarchal status, he may become querulous and demanding instead.
tradition
▪ I am not merely trying to preserve the tradition of my country.
▪ Have we the right to preserve our traditions, our heritage, our languages?...
▪ Yet these efforts to preserve tradition by isolating society from Western influence were doomed to failure.
▪ He felt that to have any chance of preserving the family tradition, a single individual must inherit.
▪ Our family has caught dolphins since 1919 and we want to preserve the tradition.
unity
▪ Such small changes are invaluable in giving themes renewed vitality, while at the same time preserving unity.
▪ The Movement recognised this, as it also recognised that administrative pressures were working against a concerted attempt to preserve religious unity.
value
▪ State policy will also be used to preserve traditional values, especially regarding family life, religion and culture.
■ VERB
fight
▪ During the liberation war he served in the Grey Scouts, a mountain reconnaissance team that fought determinedly to preserve minority rule.
▪ We will fight to preserve the Union, a promise which only the Conservatives can give at this election.
▪ It has for years fought hard to preserve the monopoly in giant airliners that it has through the 747.
▪ Additionally, we have fought to preserve the path despite its obvious disadvantage to us personally.
▪ It is fighting to preserve its privileges and its pensions.
▪ Yes, and Li Yuan would fight to preserve the boy, for he honestly believed that he could control him.
▪ Would her body betray her and fight to preserve its fleeing spirit, causing lingering agony instead of swift and final oblivion?
▪ Landry, the former finance minister and deputy premier, also vowed to fight to preserve Quebec's culture and language.
help
▪ Please help us preserve it for the future generations.
▪ If we use energy efficiently, we help preserve our environment, and save money, too.
▪ What they learn in school about writing helps to preserve and reclaim that heritage.
▪ But now the decoy helps to preserve the duck population.
▪ To help preserve its treasures Citalia is donating £2 to a crucial restoration fighting fund for every customer booked to the city.
▪ But they have helped to preserve the class system in Britain.
▪ It will help you preserve your independence.
seek
▪ It conflicts with growth, because growth seeks to increase wealth, and sustainability seeks only to preserve it.
▪ He also sought to preserve wheat for human consumption and issued a proclamation prohibiting the manufacture of starch from wheat.
▪ Most of us seek to preserve independence in matters in which the bodily functions of urinating and excreting are concerned.
▪ Most countries seek to preserve their international credit rating, as long-term loans are required to finance economic development.
try
▪ Faced with cuts in grant from central government, they tried to preserve services by charging users.
▪ But activists trying to preserve D.C.
▪ It was mainly books that I was trying to preserve.
▪ It seems germane, although not particularly gracious, to ask why Huckelberry didn't try to preserve the entire ranch.
▪ I am not merely trying to preserve the tradition of my country.
▪ He was just trying to preserve himself.
▪ After all, it is in Washington's interest to try to preserve a framework of order.
▪ The proletariat is trying to preserve it, improve it, and open it to everyone.
want
▪ This is not because they want to preserve General de Gaulle's regime.
▪ Most of us really want to preserve a relatively small amount of data.
▪ The middle-aged may want to preserve an order they are accustomed to, or perhaps their careers.
▪ Lomographers want to preserve the camera.
▪ She had wanted it preserved and she had chosen him as a means to this end.
▪ Larchmont Heights residents, too, want to preserve the older bungalows.
▪ And they wanted to preserve the nationalized industries.
▪ However, such plans would have required Melanie to want to preserve her former self.
wish
▪ It had the effect of driving all parties to the debate into separate corners: the employers wished to preserve the statusquo.
▪ Small countries if they wish to preserve their national heritage have something serious to worry about.
▪ If we wish to preserve a landscape in its present form we must actively direct it towards that end.
▪ He loved life and wished to preserve his body.
▪ It also looks like an original engine if you wish to preserve originality.
▪ What the conservative wishes to preserve varies with the time and place, but certain underlying elements are highly valued.
▪ If any country wishes to preserve its identity it must have control of immigration.
▪ Doctors wished to preserve their clinical freedom to prescribe what drugs they themselves felt were necessary.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
preserve sth in aspic
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ All the names in the book have been changed to preserve the victims' anonymity.
▪ As a family, we want to preserve the traditions of Jewish culture and religion.
▪ Early settlers preserved meat by drying and salting it.
▪ Here's a recipe for preserving fruit in brandy.
▪ Human organs, preserved in jars, lined the shelves of the laboratory.
▪ The house is part of local history and should be preserved.
▪ The new law preserves the national guarantee of health care for poor children.
▪ We want to preserve as much open land as possible.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ An example is preserved in the Museum.
▪ And there are still preserved among Christians traces of that Holy Spirit which appeared in the form of a dove.
▪ Boots are advisable and cameras are essential for those who like to preserve their memories in photographs.
▪ Britain knows it has to preserve Hong Kong's autonomy.
▪ He destroyed the heart of the city but then decided to preserve what could be preserved.
▪ So conservationists hope they can preserve the area's outstanding natural beauty and cater for the tourists too.
▪ The calculation proceeds for as many time-moments as will preserve the desired accuracy.
▪ The Forestry Commission are making valiant efforts to re-create these old woodlands, and are trying to preserve the little that remains.
II.noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
exclusive
▪ There is nothing about this combination of themes which marks it out as the exclusive preserve of the right.
▪ This is the exclusive preserve of the cave explorer who cares less for personal discomfort.
▪ However, interviewing is not the exclusive preserve of survey research.
▪ But just when he was thinking it was his exclusive preserve, along came Monty.
male
▪ Because work is still considered a male role, leisure, similarly, is thought to be a male preserve.
▪ Real life was then a male preserve but Helen had no interest in the usual option of the women's pages.
▪ Every head would turn if a woman walked into one of those male preserves.
▪ Literacy, in common with all other economic and political interests, was a male and urban preserve.
▪ In cotton country women weavers made coarser cloths, quality pieces remaining a male preserve.
▪ Despite being so ubiquitous, until now they've been solely a male preserve.
▪ Not only does she execute embroideries, but designs them too - thereby encroaching on what had formerly been a male preserve.
▪ The suburban commuter station was emphatically a male preserve at certain times of day.
■ VERB
remain
▪ Lesser offices remained the preserve of local men, although they were usually people of limited importance.
▪ Cheaper ways of printing illustrations were also developed, although colour plates remained the preserve of the wealthy.
▪ The northern fens were to remain the preserve of fishers and fowlers for another 150 years.
▪ However the track north of this point remained the preserve of single-deck cars for many years.
▪ In cotton country women weavers made coarser cloths, quality pieces remaining a male preserve.
▪ Accepting the exception of Limerick, rugby has steadfastly remained the preserve of the middle-class in Ireland.
▪ Holidays are chosen together by 51%, and interestingly, diy remains a male preserve for only 52%.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
poach on sb's territory/preserve
preserve sth in aspic
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ a profession that was for years an all-white, all-male preserve
▪ the nation's first wilderness preserve
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Because work is still considered a male role, leisure, similarly, is thought to be a male preserve.
▪ Combine the preserves and water in a small saucepan and heat until preserves melt.
▪ Every head would turn if a woman walked into one of those male preserves.
▪ Many gentiles agreed that the Latter-Day Saints had good reason to be concerned about holding on to their Kingdom as a preserve.
▪ Most visitors to the preserve now park their cars outside the main gate and either hike, bike or ride horses in.
▪ This is the exclusive preserve of the cave explorer who cares less for personal discomfort.
▪ Where affection is the preserve of family and friends, status is more the preserve of the wider peer group or community.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Preserve

Preserve \Pre*serve"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Preserved; p. pr. & vb. n. Preserving.] [F. pr['e]server, from L. prae before + servare to save, preserve; cf. L. praeservare to observe beforehand. See Serve.]

  1. To keep or save from injury or destruction; to guard or defend from evil, harm, danger, etc.; to protect.

    O Lord, thou preserved man and beast.
    --Ps. xxxvi. 6.

    Now, good angels preserve the king.
    --Shak.

  2. To save from decay by the use of some preservative substance, as sugar, salt, etc.; to season and prepare for remaining in a good state, as fruits, meat, etc.; as, to preserve peaches or grapes.

    You can not preserve it from tainting.
    --Shak.

  3. To maintain throughout; to keep intact; as, to preserve appearances; to preserve silence.

    To preserve game, to protect it from extermination.

    Syn: To keep; save; secure; uphold; sustain; defend; spare; protect; guard; shield. See Keep.

Preserve

Preserve \Pre*serve"\, v. i.

  1. To make preserves.
    --Shak.

  2. To protect game for purposes of sport.

Preserve

Preserve \Pre*serve"\, n.

  1. That which is preserved; fruit, etc., seasoned and kept by suitable preparation; esp., fruit cooked with sugar; -- commonly in the plural.

  2. A place in which game, fish, etc., are preserved for purposes of sport, or for food.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
preserve

late 14c., "keep safe," from Anglo-French preservare, Old French preserver, from Medieval Latin preservare "keep, preserve," from Late Latin praeservare "guard beforehand," from Latin prae "before" (see pre-) + servare "to keep safe" (see observe). As a treatment of fruit, etc., 1570s; of organic bodies from 1610s. Related: Preserved; preserving.

preserve

"fruit preserved with sugar," c.1600, from preserve (v.). Earlier it meant "a preservative" (1550s). Sense of "protected place for animals or plants" (a sense more properly belonging to conserve) is from 1807.

Wiktionary
preserve

n. 1 A sweet spread made of any of a variety of berries. 2 A reservation, a nature preserve. 3 An activity with restricted access. vb. 1 To protect; to keep from harm or injury. 2 To save from decay by the use of some preservative substance, such as as sugar or salt; to season and prepare (fruits, meat, etc.) for storage. 3 To maintain throughout; to keep intact.

WordNet
preserve
  1. n. a domain that seems to be specially reserved for someone; "medicine is no longer a male preserve"

  2. a reservation where animals are protected

  3. fruit preserved by cooking with sugar [syn: conserve, conserves, preserves]

preserve
  1. v. keep or maintain in unaltered condition; cause to remain or last; "preserve the peace in the family"; "continue the family tradition"; "Carry on the old traditions" [syn: continue, uphold, carry on, bear on] [ant: discontinue]

  2. keep in safety and protect from harm, decay, loss, or destruction; "We preserve these archeological findings"; "The old lady could not keep up the building"; "children must be taught to conserve our national heritage"; "The museum curator conserved the ancient manuscripts" [syn: conserve, maintain, keep up]

  3. to keep up and reserve for personal or special use; "She saved the old family photographs in a drawer" [syn: save]

  4. prevent (food) from rotting; "preserved meats"; "keep potatoes fresh" [syn: keep]

  5. maintain in safety from injury, harm, or danger; "May God keep you" [syn: keep]

  6. keep undisturbed for personal or private use for hunting, shooting, or fishing; "preserve the forest and the lakes"

Wikipedia
Preserve

The word preserve may refer to:

  • Fruit preserves, a type of sweet spread or condiment
  • Nature reserve, an area of importance for wildlife, flora, fauna or other special interest, usually protected
  • Preserve (horse), a British Thoroughbred racehorse
  • A 2004 compilation involving the band Wow & Flutter
  • "Preserve", a 2013 season 2 episode of The Mind of a Chef

In Companies:

  • Preserve, an American sustainable consumer goods company

In safety and technology:

  • Dust resistant
  • Fire resistant
  • Rot-proof
  • Rustproof
  • Thermal resistant
  • Impact resistant
  • Waterproof
Preserve (company)

Preserve is an American sustainable consumer goods company that creates recyclable household products from recycled No.5 polypropylene plastic. The company was founded in 1996 by Eric Hudson, a Babson alum, and it is headquartered in Waltham, Massachusetts. Preserve uses recycled and post consumer plastic to create all of its products from toothbrushes and razors to kitchenware.

Preserve (horse)

Preserve (1832–1855) was a British Thoroughbred racehorse and broodmare who won the classic 1000 Guineas at Newmarket Racecourse in 1835. She was the leading British two-year-old filly in 1834, when she was unbeaten in three races at Newmarket. In the following spring she added a victory in the 1000 Guineas before finishing second to Queen of Trumps when favourite for the Oaks Stakes a month later. She returned to win three races at Goodwood Racecourse before ending her career by running fourth in the St Leger Stakes. After her retirement from racing, Preserve became a successful broodmare, whose direct descendants have won many important races, especially in North America.

Usage examples of "preserve".

Wherever sediment did not accumulate on the bed of the sea, or where it did not accumulate at a sufficient rate to protect organic bodies from decay, no remains could be preserved.

I can see no difficulty in natural selection preserving and continually accumulating variations of instinct to any extent that may be profitable.

We should then be brought to acknowledge that it behooves a Christian traveller to crave the assistance of Him who can enable us to suffer with becoming fortitude and resignation all the afflicting dispensations of life, rather than desire to be preserved from meeting them.

He was drawn into the conversational circle against his will, having stood close enough to Keith to look as if he was with him, and had to suffer the looks of the Commission Officers at his affrontery to poach on their private preserve.

By this latest allonge to the Sacred Covenant Priestess Poogli agrees to permit an all-out food-netting in her newly discovered preserve at the bottom of our universe.

A natural mildness and moderation of temper preserved him from the assaults of passion, and the allurements of vice.

The successors of Basil amused themselves with the belief, that the conquest of Lombardy had been achieved, and was still preserved by the justice of their laws, the virtues of their ministers, and the gratitude of a people whom they had rescued from anarchy and oppression.

Note that he frequently puts the point of sight quite at the side of his canvas, as at S, which gives almost the effect of angular perspective whilst it preserves the flatness and simplicity of parallel or horizontal perspective.

The next instant the seat of the chair rose up audibly to its normal level, and the antimacassar fell out into its usual folds, still preserving, however, the traces of its previous wrinkles.

He was attended by a body of cavalry: but having stopped on the road for some necessary occasion, his guards preserved a respectful distance, and Martialis, approaching his person under a presence of duty, stabbed him with a dagger.

Kundera resorts to ellipsis precisely in order to preserve the architectonic lightness and balance of such narrative and discursive complexity.

He stopped, drew his shapes, walked on, stopped, drew, walked, on to the spired old-century cragginess of Nabob Bridge, and over quickly through Kinken where the richer khepri moieties, older money and arriviste, preserved their dreamed-up culture in the Plaza of Statues, kitsch mythic shapes in khepri-spit.

Nor did they separate non-Westerners from Westerners when the incoming non-Westerners sought to preserve no barrier of their own: during the youth of our Culture, on the Eastern Marches of Europe, many thousands of Slavs were assimilated into the European races, disappeared into them and became completely European.

The really perilous course lies in preserving the status quo and institutionalizing our past failed policies: open borders, unlimited immigration, dependence on cheap and illegal labor, obsequious deference to Mexico City, erosion of legal statutes, multiculturalism in our schools, and a general breakdown in the old assimilationist model.

Muslim minority, as symbolized by the highly controversial decision in 2003 to ban Muslim girls from wearing headscarves in schools, on the principle of the role of the state education system in preserving the secular and assimilatory values of the republic.