conserving 的 2 个定义
con·served, con·serv·ing.
- to prevent injury, decay, waste, or loss of: Conserve your strength for the race.
- to use or manage wisely; preserve; save: Conserve the woodlands.
- Physics, Chemistry. to hold constant during an interaction or process: the interaction conserved linear momentum.
- to preserve by cooking with sugar or syrup.
- Often conserves. a mixture of several fruits cooked to jamlike consistency with sugar and often garnished with nuts and raisins.
conserving 近义词
save, protect
更多conserving例句
- At Belmont, jockeys must not let their horse run too hard too early, and conserve some energy for the half-mile-long backstretch.
- I am seeking to conserve nothing; I am looking ahead—and I am quite confident that I am not alone.
- It sent its last picture 13 years ago, just before shutting down its camera to conserve power.
- Districts may also employ additional tactics to conserve resources.
- The agreement is hardly more than a list of ways that local communities can better conserve natural resources.
- It will not conserve Christianity, but may be purified by it, even if able to flourish without it.
- Barrington back into the present, to conserve his energies, to make him a man of action again.
- Boil together a few times, and then pour the conserve into cases.
- You have heard how women strive to conserve the lives of children, to make them strong mentally, morally and physically.
- There is simply one way to conserve our natural resources, and that is to educate the farmer (applause).