0 to keep and protect something from damage, change, or waste:
1 a type of jam in which the fruit is whole or in large pieces:
apricot/strawberry conserve
2 to keep and protect from waste, loss, or damage; preserve:
In order to conserve fuel, they put in extra insulation.
Protein-protein interactions : structurally conserved residues distinguish between binding sites and exposed protein surfaces.
The volume and the angular momentum of each cross-vortex filament are conserved throughout the stretching as a result of disregarding the viscous dissipation.
Secondly, the metaphor implies inertia, conserving the energy.
If the baryon number is conserved, then only a small fraction of the energy content of matter can be extracted.
What would be conserved if ' 'the tape were played twice ' '?
A genetic locus of enterocyte effacement conserved among diverse enterobacterial pathogens.
The synthesis of single-domain magnetite crystals by numerous species raises the possibility that similar, conserved genes may control these biomineralization processes.
Clear and well-defined fringes indicate that a stable phase relationship is conserved across all the generated visible spectrum.
中文繁体
保護, 保藏, 保存…
More中文简体
保护, 保藏, 保存…
MoreEspañol
conservar, proteger, ahorrar…
MorePortuguês
conservar, preservar…
More日本語
(エネルギーなど)を保存する, ~を節約する, (動物や場所)を保護する…
MoreTürk dili
idareli/dikkatli/çarçur etmeden kullanmak, korumak, muhafaza etmek…
MoreFrançais
préserver, économiser, conserver…
MoreCatalan
conservar, protegir…
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