re-serve

UK:*UK and possibly other pronunciationsUK and possibly other pronunciations/riːˈsɜːv/US:USA pronunciation: respellingUSA pronunciation: respelling(rē sûrv)


WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2025
re-serve  (rē sûrv),USA pronunciation v.t., v.i., -served, -serv•ing. 
  1. to serve again.
  • re- + serve 1865–70

re•serve  (ri zûrv),USA pronunciation v., -served, -serv•ing, n., adj. 
v.t. 
  1. to keep back or save for future use, disposal, treatment, etc.
  2. to retain or secure by express stipulation.
  3. to set apart for a particular use, purpose, service, etc.:ground reserved for gardening.
  4. to keep for oneself.
  5. to retain (the original color) of a surface, as on a painted ceramic piece.
  6. Religionto save or set aside (a portion of the Eucharistic elements) to be administered, as to the sick, outside of the Mass or communion service.

n. 
  1. Business[Finance.]
    • Businesscash, or assets readily convertible into cash, held aside, as by a corporation, bank, state or national government, etc., to meet expected or unexpected demands.
    • uninvested cash held to comply with legal requirements.
  2. something kept or stored for use or need;
    stock:a reserve of food.
  3. a resource not normally called upon but available if needed.
  4. a tract of public land set apart for a special purpose:a forest reserve.
  5. an act of reserving;
    reservation, exception, or qualification:I will do what you ask, but with one reserve.
  6. Military
    • a fraction of a military force held in readiness to sustain the attack or defense made by the rest of the force.
    • the part of a country's fighting force not in active service.
    • reserves, the enrolled but not regular components of the U.S. Army.
  7. formality and self-restraint in manner and relationship;
    avoidance of familiarity or intimacy with others:to conduct oneself with reserve.
  8. reticence or silence.
  9. in reserve, put aside or withheld for a future need;
    reserved:money in reserve.
  10. without reserve:
    • without restraint;
      frankly;
      freely.
    • (of articles at auction) without limitation as to the terms of sale, esp. with no stipulated minimum price.

adj. 
  1. kept in reserve;
    forming a reserve:a reserve fund; a reserve supply.
  2. Animal Husbandryof or pertaining to the animal awarded second place in livestock shows:the reserve champion steer.
  • Latin reservāre to keep back, retain, equivalent. to re- re- + servāre to save
  • Middle French reserver
  • Middle English reserven (verb, verbal) 1325–75
re•serva•ble, adj. 
re•serveless, adj. 
    • 1.See corresponding entry in Unabridged husband, hold, store. See keep. 
    • 8.See corresponding entry in Unabridged supply.
    • 14.See corresponding entry in Unabridged taciturnity, constraint, coldness.
    • 1.See corresponding entry in Unabridged squander.
    • 13, 14.See corresponding entry in Unabridged warmth.

Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
re-serve / riːˈsɜːv/
  1. (transitive) to serve again

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