English-Thai Dictionary
conservable
A เกี่ยวกับ การสงวน ไว้
conservancy
N การอนุรักษ์ ธรรมชาติ kan-ar-nu-rak-ta-ma-chad
conservancy
N องค์กร ที่ ทำหน้าที่ อนุรักษ์ ธรรมชาติ ong-kon-ti-tam-na-ti-ar-nu-rak-ta-ma-chad
conservation
N การป้องกัน ความสูญเสีย การสงวน ไว้ การรักษา ไว้ preservation protection kan-pong-kan-kwam-sun-sia
conservation
N การอนุรักษ์ ธรรมชาติ kan-ar-nu-rak-ta-ma-chad
conservationist
N นัก อนุรักษ์ ธรรมชาติ environmentalist nak-ar-nu-rak-ta-ma-chad
conservatism
N หลักปฏิบัติ ของ นัก อนุรักษ์ lak-pa-ti-bad-kong-nak-ar-nu-rak
conservative
ADJ ที่ เป็น การป้องกัน ti-pen-kan-pong-kan
conservative
ADJ ที่ เป็น อนุรักษ์นิยม traditional conventional ti-pen-ar-nu-rak-ni-yom
conservative
ADJ ระมัดระวัง cautious ra-mad-ra-wang
conservative
N คนที่ มี แนวคิด อนุรักษ์นิยม kon-ti-me-naeo-kid-ar-nu-rak-ni-yom
conservatoire
N โรงเรียน สอน ดนตรี college of music conservatory rong-rian-son-don-tri
conservator
N ผู้ ที่ทำงาน เกี่ยวกับ การ เก็บรักษา งานศิลปะ phu-ti-tam-ngan-kiao-kab-kan-keb-rak-sa-ngan-sin-la-pa
conservator
N ผู้ ปกป้อง protector guardian phu-pok-pong
conservatory
N เรือนกระจก สำหรับ เก็บ ต้นไม้ glasshouse greenhouse nursery ruean-kra-jok-sam-rab-keb-ton-mai
conservatory
N โรงเรียน สอน ดนตรี college of music conservatoire rong-rian-son-don-tri
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
CONSERVABLE
a.[See Conserve. ] That may be kept or preserved from decay or injury.
CONSERVANCY
n.[L. See Conserve. ] A court of conservancy is held by the Lord Mayor of London, for the preservation of the fishery on the Thames.
CONSERVANT
a.Preserving; having the power or quality of preserving from decay or destruction.
CONSERVATION
n.[L. See Conserve. ] The act of preserving, guarding or protecting; preservation from loss, decay, injury, or violation; the keeping of a thing in a safe or entire state; as the conservation of bodies from perishing; the conservation of the peace of society; the conservation of privileges.
CONSERVATIVE
a.Preservative; having power to preserve in a safe or entire state, or from loss, waste or injury.
CONSERVATOR
n. 1. A preserver; one who preserves from injury or violation. Appropriately, an officer who has the charge of preserving the public peace, as judges and sheriffs; also, an officer who has the charge of preserving the rights and privileges of a city, corporation or community, as in catholic universities. It is a word of extensive application.
2. In Connecticut, a person appointed to superintend idiots, lunatics, etc. , manage their property, and preserve it from waste.
CONSERVATORY
a.Having the quality of preserving from loss, decay or injury.
CONSERVATORY
n. 1. A place for preserving any thing in a state desired, as from loss, decay, waste or injury. Thus a fish-pond for keeping fish, a granary for corn, an ice-house for ice and other things, a receptacle for water, etc. , are called conservatories.
2. A large green-house for exotics, in which the plants are planted in beds and borders, and not in tubs or pots, as in the common green-house.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
CONSERVABLE
Con *serv "a *ble, a. Etym: [L. conservabilitis.]
Defn: Capable of being preserved from decay or injury.
CONSERVANCY
CONSERVANCY Con *serv "an *cy, n.
Defn: Conservation, as from injury, defilement, or irregular use. [An act was ] passed in 1866, for vesting in the Conservators of the River Thames the conservancy of the Thames and Isis. Mozley & W.
CONSERVANT
Con *serv "ant, a. Etym: [L. conservans, p.pr. ]
Defn: Having the power or quality of conservation.
CONSERVATION
Con `ser *va "tion, n. Etym: [L. conservatio: cf. F. conservation. ]
Defn: The act of preserving, guarding, or protecting; the keeping (of a thing ) in a safe or entire state; preservation. A step necessary for the conservation of Protestantism. Hallam. A state without the means of some change is without the means of its conservation. Burke. Conservation of areas (Astron.), the principle that the radius vector drawn from a planet to the sun sweeps over equal areas in equal times. -- Conservation of energy, or Conservation of force (Mech. ), the principle that the total energy of any material system is a quantity which can neither be increased nor diminished by any action between the parts of the system, though it may be transformed into any of the forms of which energy is susceptible. Clerk Maxwell.
CONSERVATIONAL
CONSERVATIONAL Con `ser *va "tion *al, a.
Defn: Tending to conserve; preservative.
CONSERVATISM
Con *serv "a *tism, n. Etym: [For conservatism. ]
Defn: The disposition and tendency to preserve what is established; opposition to change; the habit of mind; or conduct, of a conservative.
CONSERVATIVE
Con *serv "a *tive, a. Etym: [Cf. F. conservatif.]
1. Having power to preserve in a safe of entire state, or from loss, waste, or injury; preservative.
2. Tending or disposed to maintain existing institutions; opposed to change or innovation.
3. Of or pertaining to a political party which favors the conservation of existing institutions and forms of government as the Conservative party in england; -- contradistinguished from Liberal and Radical. We have always been conscientuously attached to what is called the Tory, and which might with more propierty be called the Conservative, party. Quart. Rev. (183 ). Conservative system (Mech. ), a material sustem of such a nature that after the system has undergone any series of changes, and been brought back in any manner to its original state, the whole work done by external agents on the system is equal to the whole work done by the system overcoming external forces. Clerk Maxwell.
CONSERVATIVE
CONSERVATIVE Con *serv "a *tive, n.
1. One who, or that which, preserves from ruin, injury, innovation, or radical change; a preserver; a conserver. The Holy Spirit is the great conservative of the new life. Jer. Taylor.
2. One who desires to maintain existing institutions and customs; also, one who holds moderate opinions in politics; -- opposed to revolutionary or radical.
3. (Eng. Hist. )
Defn: A member of the Conservative party.
CONSERVATIVENESS
CONSERVATIVENESS Con *serv "a *tive *ness, a.
Defn: The quality of being conservative.
CONSERVATOIRE
Con `ser "va *toire `, n. Etym: [F.]
Defn: A public place of instruction in any special branch, esp. music and the arts. [See Conservatory, 3 ].
CONSERVATOR
Con "ser *va `tor, n. Etym: [L.: cf. F. conservateur. ]
1. One who preserves from injury or violation; a protector; a preserver. The great Creator and Conservator of the world. Derham.
2. (Law ) (a ) An officer who has charge of preserving the public peace, as a justice or sheriff. (b ) One who has an official charge of preserving the rights and privileges of a city, corporation, community, or estate. The lords of the secret council were likewise made conservators of the peace of the two kingdoms. Clarendon. The conservator of the estate of an idiot. Bouvier. Conservators of the River Thames, a board of comissioners instituted by Parliament to have the conservancy of the Thames.
CONSERVATORY
Con *serv "a *to *ry, a. Etym: [Cf. F. conservatoire, LL. conservatorius.]
Defn: Having the quality of preserving from loss, decay, or injury.
CONSERVATORY
Con *serv "a *to *ry, n. Etym: [Cf. F. conservatoire, LL. conservatorium. ]
1. That which preserves from injury. [Obs. ] "A conservatory of life. " Jer. Taylor.
2. A place for preserving anything from loss, decay, waste, or injury; particulary, a greenhouse for preserving exotic or tender plants.
3. A public place of instruction, designed to preserve and perfect the knowledge of some branch of science or art, esp. music.
CONSERVATRIX
Con `ser *va "trix, n. Etym: [L.]
Defn: A woman who preserves from loss, injury, etc.
New American Oxford Dictionary
conservancy
con serv an cy |kənˈsərvənsē kənˈsərvənsi | ▶noun ( pl. conservancies ) 1 [ in names ] a body concerned with the preservation of nature, specific species, or natural resources: the Nature Conservancy. • Brit. a commission or group of officials controlling a port, river, or drainage basin. 2 the conservation of something, esp. wildlife and the environment. ORIGIN mid 18th cent.: alteration of obsolete conservacy, from Anglo-Norman French conservacie, via Anglo-Latin from Latin conservation- (see conservation ).
conservation
con ser va tion |ˌkänsərˈvāSHən ˌkɑnsərˈveɪʃən | ▶noun the action of conserving something, in particular: • preservation, protection, or restoration of the natural environment, natural ecosystems, vegetation, and wildlife. • preservation, repair, and prevention of deterioration of archaeological, historical, and cultural sites and artifacts. • prevention of excessive or wasteful use of a resource. • Physics the principle by which the total value of a physical quantity (such as energy, mass, or linear or angular momentum ) remains constant in a system. DERIVATIVES con ser va tion al |-SHənl |adjective ORIGIN late Middle English (in the general sense ‘conserving, preservation ’): from Latin conservatio (n- ), from the verb conservare (see conserve ).
conservation area
con |ser |va ¦tion area ▶noun Brit. an area of notable environmental or historical interest or importance which is protected by law against undesirable changes.
conservationist
con ser va tion ist |ˌkänsərˈvāSHənist ˌkɑnsərˈveɪʃənəst | ▶noun a person who advocates or acts for the protection and preservation of the environment and wildlife.
conservation of charge
con ser va tion of charge ▶noun a principle stating that the total electric charge of an isolated system is fixed.
conservation of energy
con ser va tion of en er gy ▶noun a principle stating that energy cannot be created or destroyed, but can be altered from one form to another.
conservation of mass
con ser va tion of mass ▶noun a principle stating that mass cannot be created or destroyed.
conservative
con serv a tive |kənˈsərvətiv kənˈsərvəˌtɪv | ▶adjective holding to traditional attitudes and values and cautious about change or innovation, typically in relation to politics or religion. • (of dress or taste ) sober and conventional: a conservative suit. • (of an estimate ) purposely low for the sake of caution: the film was not cheap —$30,000 is a conservative estimate. • (of surgery or medical treatment ) intended to control rather than eliminate a condition, with existing tissue preserved as far as possible. • ( Conservative ) of or relating to the Conservative Party of Great Britain or a similar party in another country. ▶noun a person who is averse to change and holds to traditional values and attitudes, typically in relation to politics. • ( Conservative ) a supporter or member of the Conservative Party of Great Britain or a similar party in another country. DERIVATIVES con serv a tism |kənˈsərvəˌtizəm |noun, con serv a tive ly adverb, con serv a tive ness noun ORIGIN late Middle English (in the sense ‘aiming to preserve ’): from late Latin conservativus, from conservat- ‘conserved, ’ from the verb conservare (see conserve ). Current senses date from the mid 19th century onward.
Conservative Judaism
Con serv a tive Ju da ism ▶noun a form of Judaism, particularly prevalent in North America, that seeks to preserve Jewish tradition and ritual but has a more flexible approach to the interpretation of the law than Orthodox Judaism.
Conservative Party
Con serv a tive Par ty |kənˈsərvədɪv | ▶noun a political party promoting free enterprise and private ownership, in particular a major British party that emerged from the old Tory Party in the 1830s and 1840s.
conservatoire
con ser va toire |kənˈsərvəˌtwär kənˈsɜːrvətwɑːr | ▶noun another term for conservatory ( sense 1 ). ORIGIN late 18th cent.: French, from Italian conservatorio, from late Latin conservatorium, from conservare ‘to preserve ’ (see conserve ). Compare with conservatory .
conservator
con ser va tor |kənˈsərvətər, -ˌtôr, ˈkänsərˌvātər kənˈsərvədər | ▶noun a person responsible for the repair and preservation of works of art, buildings, or other things of cultural or environmental interest. • a guardian or protector: the court does not need to appoint a conservator to handle an incapacitated person's affairs. DERIVATIVES con ser va tor ship noun
conservatory
con serv a to ry |kənˈsərvəˌtôrē kənˈsərvəˌtɔri | ▶noun ( pl. conservatories ) 1 a college for the study of classical music or other arts. 2 a room with a glass roof and walls, attached to a house at one side and used as a greenhouse or a sun parlor. ORIGIN mid 16th cent. (denoting something that preserves ): from late Latin conservatorium, from conservare ‘to preserve ’ (see conserve ).
Oxford Dictionary
conservancy
conservancy |kənˈsəːv (ə )nsi | ▶noun ( pl. conservancies ) 1 [ in names ] a body concerned with the preservation of natural resources: the Nature Conservancy. • a commission controlling a port, river, or catchment area. 2 [ mass noun ] the conservation of wildlife and the environment. ORIGIN mid 18th cent.: alteration of obsolete conservacy, from Anglo-Norman French conservacie, via Anglo-Latin from Latin conservatio (see conservation ).
conservation
con |ser |va ¦tion |kɒnsəˈveɪʃ (ə )n | ▶noun [ mass noun ] 1 the action of conserving something, in particular: • preservation, protection, or restoration of the natural environment and of wildlife. • preservation and repair of archaeological, historical, and cultural sites and artefacts. • prevention of wasteful use of a resource. 2 Physics the principle by which the total value of a physical quantity or parameter (such as energy, mass, linear or angular momentum ) remains constant in a system which is not subject to external influence. DERIVATIVES conservational adjective ORIGIN late Middle English: from Latin conservatio (n- ), from the verb conservare (see conserve ).
conservation area
con |ser |va ¦tion area ▶noun Brit. an area of notable environmental or historical interest or importance which is protected by law against undesirable changes.
conservationist
con |ser |va ¦tion |ist |kɒnsəˈveɪʃ (ə )nɪst | ▶noun a person who advocates or acts for the protection and preservation of the environment and wildlife: [ as modifier ] : conservationist groups.
conservation of charge
con ser va tion of charge ▶noun a principle stating that the total electric charge of an isolated system is fixed.
conservation of energy
con ser va tion of en er gy ▶noun a principle stating that energy cannot be created or destroyed, but can be altered from one form to another.
conservation of mass
con ser va tion of mass ▶noun a principle stating that mass cannot be created or destroyed.
conservative
con |ser ¦va |tive |kənˈsəːvətɪv | ▶adjective 1 averse to change or innovation and holding traditional values: they were very conservative in their outlook. • (of dress or taste ) sober and conventional: a conservative suit. 2 (in a political context ) favouring free enterprise, private ownership, and socially conservative ideas. • ( Conservative ) relating to the Conservative Party of Great Britain or a similar party elsewhere. 3 (of an estimate ) purposely low for the sake of caution: police placed the value of the haul at a conservative £500,000. 4 (of surgery or medical treatment ) intended to control rather than eliminate a condition, with existing tissue preserved as far as possible. ▶noun 1 a person who is averse to change and holds traditional values. 2 ( Conservative ) a supporter or member of the Conservative Party of Great Britain or a similar party elsewhere. PHRASES conservative with a small ‘c ’ said of someone who is conservative in outlook but does not necessarily vote for or support a Conservative party: I think there are a good number of teachers who are instinctively conservative with a small c. DERIVATIVES conservatism noun, conservatively adverb, conservativeness noun ORIGIN late Middle English (in the sense ‘aiming to preserve ’): from late Latin conservativus, from conservat- ‘conserved ’, from the verb conservare (see conserve ). Current senses date from the mid 19th cent.
Conservative Judaism
Conservative Juda |ism ▶noun [ mass noun ] a form of Judaism, particularly prevalent in North America, which seeks to preserve Jewish tradition and ritual but has a more flexible approach to the interpretation of the law than Orthodox Judaism.
Conservative Party
Conservative Party ▶noun a political party promoting free enterprise and private ownership, in particular a major British party that since the Second World War has been in power 1951 –64, 1970 –4, and 1979 –97. It emerged from the old Tory Party under Sir Robert Peel in the 1830s and 1840s.
conservatoire
conservatoire |kənˈsəːvətwɑː | ▶noun Brit. a college for the study of classical music or other arts, typically in the continental European tradition. ORIGIN late 18th cent.: French, from Italian conservatorio, from late Latin conservatorium, from conservare ‘to preserve ’ (see conserve ). Compare with conservatory .
conservator
conservator |ˈkɒnsəˌveɪtə, kənˈsəːvətə | ▶noun a person responsible for the repair and preservation of things of cultural or environmental interest, such as buildings or works of art.
conservatorium
conservatorium |kənˌsəːvəˈtɔːrɪəm | ▶noun ( pl. conservatoriums or conservatoria ) Australian term for conservatoire. ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: from German Konservatorium and modern Latin.
conservatory
con |ser ¦va |tory |kənˈsəːvət (ə )ri | ▶noun ( pl. conservatories ) 1 Brit. a room with a glass roof and walls, attached to a house at one side and used as a sun lounge or for growing delicate plants. 2 N. Amer. another term for conservatoire. ORIGIN mid 16th cent. (denoting something that preserves ): from late Latin conservatorium, from conservare ‘to preserve ’ (see conserve ).
American Oxford Thesaurus
conservation
conservation noun the conservation of tropical forests: preservation, protection, safeguarding, safekeeping; care, guardianship, husbandry, supervision; upkeep, maintenance, repair, restoration; ecology, environmentalism.
conservative
conservative adjective 1 the conservative wing of the party: right-wing, reactionary, traditionalist; Republican; Brit. Tory; informal redneck. ANTONYMS socialist. 2 our more conservative neighbors may object to the modern architecture being proposed: traditionalist, traditional, conventional, orthodox, old-fashioned, dyed-in-the-wool, hidebound, unadventurous, set in one's ways; moderate, middle-of-the-road, buttoned-down; informal stick-in-the-mud. ANTONYMS radical. 3 he wore a conservative blue suit: conventional, sober, modest, plain, unobtrusive, restrained, subtle, low-key, demure; informal square, straight. ANTONYMS ostentatious. 4 a conservative estimate: low, cautious, understated, moderate, reasonable. ▶noun liberals and conservatives have found common ground: right-winger, reactionary, rightist, diehard; Republican; Brit. Tory.
conservatory
conservatory noun 1 a frost-free conservatory: summer house, belvedere; glasshouse, greenhouse, hothouse. 2 a teaching job at the conservatory: conservatoire, music school, drama school.
Oxford Thesaurus
conservation
conservation noun the conservation of tropical forests: preservation, protection, safeguarding, safe keeping, keeping, guarding, saving, looking after; care, charge, custody, guardianship, husbandry, supervision; upkeep, keeping up, keeping going, keeping alive, maintenance, repair, restoration; ecology, environmentalism.
conservative
conservative adjective 1 the conservative wing of the party: right-wing, reactionary, traditionalist, unprogressive, establishmentarian, blimpish; fundamentalist; in the UK Tory; in the US Republican; informal true blue. ANTONYMS socialist. 2 they were held in check by the conservative trade-union movement: traditionalist, traditional, conventional, orthodox, stable, old-fashioned, dyed-in-the-wool, unchanging, hidebound; cautious, prudent, careful, safe, timid, unadventurous, unenterprising, set in one's ways; moderate, middle-of-the-road, temperate; informal stick in the mud. ANTONYMS radical. 3 men should wear a dark conservative suit: conventional, sober, quiet, modest, plain, unobtrusive, unostentatious, restrained, reserved, subdued, subtle, low-key, demure; informal square, straight. ANTONYMS ostentatious. 4 a conservative estimate: low, cautious, understated, unexaggerated, moderate, reasonable. ▶noun liberals and conservatives are beginning to find common ground on one point: right-winger, reactionary, rightist, diehard; in the UK Tory; in the US Republican.
conservatory
conservatory noun 1 keep plant cuttings in a frost-free conservatory: greenhouse, glasshouse, hothouse; summer house, gazebo, pavilion, belvedere. 2 he got a teaching job at the conservatory: conservatoire, music school, drama school, academy /institute of music /drama.
French Dictionary
conservateur
conservateur , trice adj. et n. m. et f. adjectif Qui est attaché aux valeurs du passé, aux traditions, aux institutions établies, opposé à une évolution. : Ma grand-mère n ’est pas trop conservatrice. ANTONYME avant-gardiste ; innovateur . Adepte du Parti conservateur. : Des conservateurs. FORMES FAUTIVES conservateur. Anglicisme pour mesuré, modéré, modeste, pondéré, prudent. : Une évaluation prudente (et non *conservatrice ). estimé conservateur. Calque de « conservative estimate » pour évaluation modérée ou modeste.
conservateur
conservateur conservatrice n. m. et f. nom masculin et féminin Personne chargée de l ’administration d ’une bibliothèque, d ’un musée. : Nous consulterons le conservateur.
conservation
conservation n. f. nom féminin Action de maintenir intact. : La conservation des aliments par le froid. SYNONYME préservation . LOCUTION Instinct de conservation. Instinct qui incite un être à protéger sa vie.
conservatisme
conservatisme n. m. nom masculin État d ’esprit des conservateurs. : Le conservatisme de ces dinosaures est déprimant. SYNONYME immobilisme . ANTONYME avant-gardisme .
conservatoire
conservatoire n. m. nom masculin Établissement qui forme des comédiens, des musiciens.
Spanish Dictionary
conserva
conserva nombre femenino Alimento preparado de modo conveniente y envasado herméticamente para mantenerlo comestible durante mucho tiempo :latas de conservas; conservas de pescado; por lo general hay que preferir los alimentos frescos a las conservas .
conservable
conservable adjetivo Que puede ser conservado :no hay historia estática ni presente conservable .
conservación
conservación nombre femenino 1 Acción de conservar o conservarse :instinto de conservación; técnicas de conservación de alimentos; la Ley de conservación de las especies naturales, flora y fauna silvestre, de 1989, señala que debe existir una muestra de parques nacionales que sea representativa de los diferentes ecosistemas del país; se hallaron manuscritos en lamentable estado de conservación .2 Efecto de conservar o conservarse .
conservacionismo
conservacionismo nombre femenino Tendencia a conservar alguna cosa o situación determinada, especialmente el medio ambiente .A veces se usa como sinónimo de ecologismo .
conservacionista
conservacionista adjetivo 1 Que tiende a conservar alguna cosa o situación determinada, especialmente el medio ambiente :los movimientos conservacionistas y ecologistas denunciaron la necesidad de reglamentos para evaluar los impactos ambientales .2 adjetivo /nombre común [persona ] Que tiende a conservar alguna cosa o situación determinada, especialmente el medio ambiente :los conservacionistas proponen el desarrollo de un “turismo verde ” que concentre a los visitantes en los valles y facilite el alojamiento en casas rurales y albergues .
conservador, -ra
conservador, -ra adjetivo 1 Que denota conservadurismo o lo defiende :actitud conservadora; ideología conservadora; partido conservador; periódico conservador .2 adjetivo /nombre masculino y femenino [persona ] Que es partidario de mantener los valores políticos, sociales y morales tradicionales y se opone a reformas o cambios radicales en la sociedad .3 nombre masculino y femenino Persona encargada de la conservación de los fondos documentales de un museo o archivo o de una de sus secciones :el conservador del Museo del Prado ha preparado una gran exposición sobre Goya .4 nombre masculino Bol, Pan Recipiente de plástico o metal que se cierra herméticamente y sirve para conservar o llevar alimentos, en especial comida cocinada .
conservadora
conservadora nombre femenino Arg, Bol Conservador (recipiente ).
conservadurismo
conservadurismo nombre masculino 1 Doctrina política que defiende el mantenimiento del sistema de valores políticos, sociales y morales tradicionales y se opone a reformas o cambios radicales en la sociedad .2 Actitud de defensa de la tradición y rechazo de las reformas en una materia o disciplina :el conservadurismo de la dirección impide que la institución abra sus puertas a las mujeres .3 Actitud de cautela por temor a perder lo que se tiene :el conservadurismo del equipo visitante salvó de la derrota a los de casa; el factor predominante de la economía actual es el conservadurismo de la inversión privada .
conservante
conservante adjetivo 1 Que conserva o sirve para conservar :la conservación transitoria de cadáveres se realiza mediante la inyección de líquidos conservantes en las venas y arterias .2 adjetivo /nombre masculino [sustancia ] Que se añade a un alimento para impedir o retrasar el deterioro de su calidad .
conservar
conservar verbo transitivo 1 Hacer que una cosa se mantenga en buen estado, guardándola en determinadas condiciones o haciendo lo necesario para que así sea :conservar la hacienda; el frío conserva más tiempo la fruta; debemos conservar los bosques para que nuestros hijos puedan vivir en este planeta ;la mermelada se conserva mejor en el frigorífico .2 Tener una cosa guardada con cuidado para que no se estropee o se pierda :en una vitrina de la biblioteca, conserva un incunable que le regaló su abuelo; en el museo se conservan piezas de extraordinario valor histórico; se cercioró de que aún conservaba las llaves de siempre .3 Continuar teniendo algo, especialmente cierto estado, condición, actitud, etc. :me pareció que conservaba la sonrisa irónica en su rostro; aunque está ya muy mayor, todavía conserva las ganas de hacer cosas; cuando lo entramos a ver todavía conservaba el conocimiento .4 Mantener o tener una cosa de forma permanente o sin que sufra cambios :este arte conservaba influencias visigodas; el español conserva cultismos del latín; la antigua tierra de los rajputs, en el noroeste de la India, conserva todavía vivo el recuerdo de aquellos feroces guerreros ;este rasgo lingüístico solamente se conserva en algunos romances .5 Someter un alimento al proceso de conserva :conservar la fruta .6 conservarse verbo pronominal Mantenerse [una persona ] en buen estado :el tiempo no pasa para ti, ¡qué bien te conservas!
conservativo, -va
conservativo, -va adjetivo Que conserva o sirve para conservar .
conservatorio
conservatorio nombre masculino Institución de enseñanza y difusión de la música, el canto y otras artes relacionadas :estudió la carrera musical en el conservatorio municipal de su ciudad .
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
conservancy
con ser van cy /kənsə́ː r v (ə )nsi /名詞 U ⦅英 ⦆1 (土地 河川 港湾などの )管理委員会 ; 環境保護団体 (!しばしばC -として団体名に使われる ) .2 (動植物 森林など )天然資源の保護 [管理 ](→conservation ).
conservation
con ser va tion /kɑ̀nsə r véɪʃ (ə )n |kɔ̀n -/名詞 U 1 (動植物 森林など )自然の保護 [管理 ]; (官庁の保護下にある )森林 , 漁場 ; (文化財 美術品などの )保存 ▸ wildlife conservation 野生生物の保護 ▸ conservation of endangered species 絶滅種の保護 2 (エネルギーなどの )節約 ; 〘物理 化 〙恒存 , 不変 ▸ energy conservation エネルギーの節約 ▸ the principle of the conservation of energy 〘物理 〙エネルギー保存の法則 ~́ à rea ⦅英 ⦆(動植物 文化財 天然記念物などの )保全 [保護 ]地域 [地区 ].
conservationist
c ò n ser v á tion ist 名詞 C 環境保護論者 ; 文化財保護主義者 .
conservatism
con ser va tism /kənsə́ː r vətɪ̀z (ə )m /名詞 U 1 保守主義, 保守性 .2 〖通例C -〗(英国などの )保守党の主義 [政策 ].
conservative
con ser va tive /kənsə́ː r vətɪv /〖原義は 「保存力のある 」〗(名 )conservation 形容詞 more ~; most ~1 〈人 考え方などが 〉 «…の点で /…について » 保守的な , 保守主義の «in /about » (↔progressive ); 右翼 [右派 ]の ▸ conservative views 保守的な考え ▸ be conservative in opinion 意見が保守的である 2 比較なし 〖通例C -〗(英国 カナダなどの )保守党の ; 保守派ユダヤ教の ▸ a Conservative politician 保守党の政治家 3 〈趣味 服装などが 〉古風な , 伝統的な ▸ be in a conservative style 地味な服装で 4 〖通例 名詞 の前で 〗控えめの , 慎重な 〈評価 推測など 〉▸ a conservative estimate 控えめな見積り 5 〈薬品などが 〉保存性の .名詞 C 1 〖通例C -〗保守党員 (⦅略 ⦆Con ).2 保守的な人 , 伝統主義者 .3 防腐剤 .C -̀ J ú daism 〘宗 〙保守派ユダヤ教 .C -́ P à rty 〖the ~〗(英国 カナダなどの )保守党 (→Labour Party ).~̀ s ú rgery 〘医 〙保存外科 .~ly 副詞 保守的に ; 控えめに .~ness 名詞 保守性 .
conservatoire
con ser va toire /kənsə́ː r vətwɑ̀ː r , ⦅米 ⦆--̀--́ /〖<フランス 〗名詞 C ⦅英 ⦆コンセルヴァトワール 〘主にヨーロッパの音楽 演劇などの学校 〙; 音楽院, 音楽学校 (⦅米 ⦆conservatory ).
conservator
con ser va tor /kənsə́ː r vətə r , ⦅米 ⦆kɑ́nsə r vèɪtə r /名詞 C 1 (美術品の )保存修復をする人 ; 〘法 〙後見人 .2 管理者 [委員 ].
conservatory
con ser va to ry /kənsə́ː r vətɔ̀ːri |-t (ə )ri /名詞 複 -ries C 1 温室 (greenhouse ) 〘通例一般家屋に隣接して設置されるもの 〙.2 ⦅米 ⦆=conservatoire .