different between preserver vs defender
preserver
English
Etymology
preserve +? -er
Noun
preserver (plural preservers)
- One who preserves.
- A life preserver.
- A person who refinishes furniture.
- A person who prepares preserves of fruit or preserved meats.
Derived terms
- life preserver
Related terms
- preservation
- preserve
Anagrams
- perverser
preserver From the web:
- preserver meaning
- perseverance means
- what does preserve mean
- what does perseverance
- what does preserved mean
- what wood preserver for raised beds
- what wood preserver
- what does preserve mean in hinduism
defender
English
Alternative forms
- defendor, defendour (obsolete)
Etymology
From Anglo-Norman defendour, from Old French defendeor
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /d??f?nd?(?)/
- Rhymes: -?nd?(?)
Noun
defender (plural defenders)
- someone who defends people or property
- (sports) one of the players whose primary task is to prevent the opposition from scoring
- a fighter who seeks to repel an attack
- (law, rare) a lawyer who represents defendants, especially a public defender; a defense attorney (US) or defence counsel (UK)
- (Scotland, law) a defendant in a civil action
Translations
Anagrams
- fendered, redefend
Interlingua
Verb
defender
- to defend
Conjugation
Ladino
Etymology
From Latin d?fend?, d?fendere.
Verb
defender (Latin spelling)
- to prohibit
Portuguese
Etymology
From Old Portuguese defender, from Latin d?fendere, present active infinitive of d?fend?.
Pronunciation
- (Portugal) IPA(key): /d?.f?.?de?/
- (Brazil) IPA(key): /de.f?.?de(?)/
Verb
defender (first-person singular present indicative defendo, past participle defendido)
- to defend (repel an attack)
- Synonyms: (archaic) defensar, proteger
- to defend (represent as a legal professional)
- (rhetoric) to defend
- to support (to back a cause, party etc.)
- Synonym: ser a favor de
- (sports) to defend (to prevent the opponent from scoring)
- (sports, intransitive) to play in defense
- (higher education) to formally present a dissertation, thesis or project
- first-person singular (eu) personal infinitive of defender
- third-person singular (ele and ela, also used with você and others) personal infinitive of defender
- first-person singular (eu) future subjunctive of defender
- third-person singular (ele and ela, also used with você and others) future subjunctive of defender
Conjugation
Quotations
For quotations using this term, see Citations:defender.
Related terms
Spanish
Etymology
From Latin d?fendere, present active infinitive of d?fend?. Cognate with English defend.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /defen?de?/, [d?e.f?n??d?e?]
Verb
defender (first-person singular present defiendo, first-person singular preterite defendí, past participle defendido)
- to defend, to protect, to hold down (contra (“against”), de (“from”))
- Synonym: proteger
- to stand up for, to stick up for
- to uphold
- to prohibit
- Synonym: prohibir
- to claim
- (reflexive) to fight back
- (reflexive) to defend oneself, to protect oneself
- (reflexive) to stand up for oneself, to stick up for oneself
- (takes a reflexive pronoun) to fend off (+ de)
- (takes a reflexive pronoun) to get by
Conjugation
Derived terms
- autodefenderse
Related terms
Further reading
- “defender” in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014.
defender From the web:
- what defenders have acog
- what defender has the most goals
- what defenders have assault rifles
- what defender's office
- what defenders should i buy r6
- what defenders have acog r6
- what defenders should i get r6
- what defenders have won the ballon d'or
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- preserver vs defender
- ruthless vs rough
- attack vs onrush
- detestable vs flagitious
- bend vs cant
- phlegmatic vs slack
- fond vs sympathetic
- shipment vs burden
- harmony vs understanding
- rations vs subsistence
- small vs spare
- soft vs refreshing
- destructive vs unhealthful
- arrangement vs codification
- adulteration vs melange
- intelligence vs alertness
- vicinity vs country
- cane vs clobber
- extension vs lasting
- organisation vs production