¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Timesavers
1. timesaver [n] - See also: timesaver
Lexicographical Neighbors of Timesavers
Literary usage of Timesavers
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Profit Making in Shop and Factory Management by Charles Underwood Carpenter (1908)
"They are both essentially "timesavers." These two principles are: 1.—The
determination of "standard time" for each job and its tabulation, introduction, ..."
2. Practical Banking by Oliver Howard Wolfe, La Salle Extension University (1917)
"Convenient form memorandums, such as those represented in Figures 27 to 33
inclusive, are great timesavers in transit work. ..."
3. Popular Mechanics Shop Notes (1919)
"Where a number of small motors are to be cared for, a frame for holding the
armature conveniently, and a device for cutting the mica arc timesavers. ..."
4. The Bookmart: A Monthly Magazine of Literary and Library Intelligence edited by Richard Halkett (1889)
"Bibliographies are wonderful timesavers. We cannot understand a literary man
being able to exist at any great distance from his " Lown- des. ..."
5. Everyday English Composition by Emma Miller Bolenius (1917)
"The following symbols are useful timesavers in marking mistakes: Cap Use a capital.
No cap Use a small letter. A (caret) Supply something omitted. ..."
6. Panama by Patricia Katzman (2006)
"By Air With more than 100 landing strips - some paved, some not - Panama's
inexpensive commuter flights are real timesavers. They'll get you to outer ..."
7. American Ideals by Clayton Sedgwick Cooper (1915)
"... we light our homes, we talk to our distant friends, we annihilate space in
our subways and on our limited trains, all by timesavers made in America. ..."