saviour
IPA: sˈeɪvjɝ
Root Word: Saviour
noun
- Britain standard spelling of Savior.
- (uncommon) A male given name from English
- (rare) A female given name from English
- Britain and Canada spelling of savior [A person who saves someone, rescues another from harm.]
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Examples of "saviour" in Sentences
- As my own personal short-term saviour and sex-guru puts it:
- "He's been called a saviour, a revolutionary, a genius," the publicists declare.
- Palin will be an interesting footnote in history - no long term saviour here I think.
- The solitary reference to the saviour is the messiah complex that Jonathan Powell attributes to him.
- For the man sent by the world as their saviour is none other than old 'Sticky Fingers' himself: Kofi Annan.
- My saviour was a cradle-style baby swing, and the baby has logged many many hours in there more that I'd care to admit.
- Not that Harper would ever do such a thing, but a saviour is a saviour and it might be good to get as much as one can from such a person.
- The more the public are kept in the dark, the more disatisfied they will become, and we the party currently in power can be the countrys’ saviour from the threat of a crumbling society.
- The iPad (will this release a larger-screen edition called the MaxiPad?) seemed like a saviour from the Amazon-kills-publishing price of $9.99, with projected pricing of ebooks at between $12.99 and $14.99, but it appears this was only, you know, unless Apple wants to do something else.
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