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Definition of Conserved
1. Adjective. Protected from harm or loss.
Definition of Conserved
1. Verb. (past of conserve) ¹
2. Adjective. Of or relating to something to which conservation has been applied; saved from being wasted ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Conserved
1. conserve [v] - See also: conserve
Lexicographical Neighbors of Conserved
Literary usage of Conserved
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Mind and Its Education by George Herbert Betts (1916)
"HOW PAST EXPERIENCE IS conserved Past Experience conserved in Both Mental and
Physical Terms.—If past experience plays so important a part in. our welfare, ..."
2. An Elementary Treatise on the Dynamics of a System of Rigid Bodies: With by Edward John Routh (1860)
"Hence if no external forces act on the system, the areas conserved on any plane
and about any pole in that plane will be proportional to the time. ..."
3. Constrained Mechanics and Lie Theory by Robert Hermann (1992)
"These results establish connections between conserved functions of vector field
systems and infinitesimal symmetries. In the theory of Hamiltonian Systems ..."
4. Mrs. Rorer's Vegetable Cookery and Meat Substitutes by Sarah Tyson Heston Rorer (1909)
"conserved FRUITS All fruits are conserved after the same rule. ... CANDIED OR
conserved CHERRIES Select large ripe Morella cherries. ..."
5. Cicero: A Sketch of His Life and Works by Hannis Taylor, Mary Lillie Taylor Hunt (1916)
"Raising his jice so that it could be heard by all, he swore that dur- Swore that
g his consulship he had saved the state and conserved ,hees*ate"nd ie ..."
6. The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge: Embracing by Johann Jakob Herzog, Philip Schaff, Albert Hauck (1908)
"... was to be conserved, and that existing Restriction means of edification should
be altered of Adi- only in favor of better ones. ..."
7. A Student's Philosophy of Religion by William Kelley Wright (1922)
"CHAPTER XIII CHRISTIANITY AND THE CONSERVATION OF VALUES I—The Values Which
Christianity Has conserved THE great ethical service which Christianity has ..."