sauver
Old French
/sawˈvɛr/
verb
Definitions
- to save remove from danger
Etymology
Inherited from Latin salvo, salvō, salvāre, salvus (safe, well, whole, unharmed, saved, alive, sound).
Origin
Latin
salvus
Gloss
safe, well, whole, unharmed, saved, alive, sound
Concept
Semantic Field
Emotions and values
Ontological Category
Property
Kanji
音
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- save English
- salvatio Latin
- salvator Latin
- salvatrix Latin
- salvificus Latin
- salvitas Latin
- salvo, salvare Latin
- salvo, salvāre Latin
- salvo, salvō, salvāre Latin
- salvus Latin
- salvāre Latin
- salvātiōnem Latin
- salvō Latin
- salvō, salvāre Latin
- salvare Italian
- salvo Italian
- sauf French
- sauver French
- salvar Spanish, Castilian
- salvo Spanish, Castilian
- *solh₂- Proto-Indo-European
- *solh₂wós Proto-Indo-European
- *solo- Proto-Indo-European
- sauven, saven Middle English
- saven Middle English
- sábháil Irish
- salvar Old French
- salver Old French
- sauf Old French
- salva Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- sauf Norman
- sauver Norman
- saûver Norman
- saûveux Norman
- shëlboj Albanian
- saulver Middle French
- salvar Old Portuguese
- salvâ Friulian
- salvar Old Occitan
- sauvamen Old Occitan
- salvar Old Spanish
- salvar Venetian
- salvà Istriot