0 present participle of sacrifice
1 to give up something that is valuable to you in order to help another person:
Many women sacrifice interesting careers for their families.
2 to kill an animal or a person and offer them to a god or gods
Some stories tell of people sacrificing their lives to save others; however, just as pertinent are those that highlight the importance of life over materialism.
Productoriented architecture students consider that anything is worth sacrificing to achieve the object they want.
Thus, it may be concluded that the output subjects successfully learned the target form without sacrificing comprehension.
In this way, the past finds itself trapped within an insidious cultural exchange and sacrificing what integrity it ever had.
An emphasis in section 3 is on how abstraction capabilities can be supported without sacrificing concreteness.
In many cases believers are not sacrificing at all, but simply (and rationally) exchanging goods or labor for desired services.
Such women should have refrained from extra-pair mating, sacrificing some genetic benefits they might otherwise have obtained.
Or martyrs, sacrificing ourselves on the altar of a greater social good.