0 past simple and past participle of save --
1 to stop someone or something from being killed, injured, or destroyed: --
2 to keep something, especially money, for use in the future: --
3 to prevent time, money, or effort being wasted or spent: --
4 in football and similar games, to stop the ball from going into the goal when a player on the other team has kicked or hit it --
If every stage of a simulation is saved, then a number of possibilities are immediately available.
Second, my argument aggregates the good of lives saved.
What saved his life was that he managed to smuggle out a letter indicating that he was still alive and being held captive.
It is an undoubted fact that caesarean section has saved the lives of babies.
This niche saved them from competition with women in other professional groups as well as offering them a position of prominence in the women's movement.
In this case, the image transmitted by the mobile phone is saved directly onto the server's hard drive.
Oddly, the idea that live performance must be saved from disappearance is not held as a position incompatible with the valuation of performance as ephemeral.
A significant portion of this could be saved and used to purchase land.