savor
IPA: sˈeɪvɝ
noun
- US standard spelling of savour. [The specific taste or smell of something.]
verb
- US standard spelling of savour. [(intransitive) To possess a particular taste or smell, or a distinctive quality.]
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Examples of "savor" in Sentences
- "The slowness of communication" is a phrase to savor.
- It could never be the same, and you kind of savor it and realize how lucky you were.
- Still, night after beer-soaked night, musicians and fans packed inside to savor a kaleidoscope of sound.
- Though the film never amounts to much, there are a number of wry, memorable moments to savor from the movie.
- Bad savor is endurable in oil, but not in what professes to be, and is compounded by the perfumer ( "apothecary") for, fragrance.
- So he retorts, "I was letting you savor your news program," getting a laugh out of his use of the word "savor" and her repetition of it.
- Locals come to lounge around the many low-lit tables that fill the sprawling outdoor space at Sevva (a play on the word "savor"), perched atop the penthouse of the Princes Building and decked out with work from London's Fine Art Gallery.
- The English word was influenced by the unrelated word savor, the French word shows the addition of the diminutive suffix, - ette, the Italian word was confused with santo, ` sacred, 'and the Spanish word, coming from Latin influenced by Arabic, preserves the Arabic definite article, a (l) -.
- But the combination of those tough economic decisions that led to fiscal discipline, that led to tighter control on the budget, plus all the other things that began working well for our economy -- the monetary policy is clearly one of them -- have combined to give the American people a moment to savor, which is a federal budget surplus, which is something we haven't been talking about for well over a generation.
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