to salvage, to extricate, to rescue (a thing or person)
To obtain a positive judgement; to win in a lawsuit.
To regain one's composure, balance etc.
To get better, to regain health or prosperity.
To replenish to, resume (a good state of mind or body).
To cover again.
To add a new roof membrane or steep-slope covering over an existing one.
To gain as compensation or reparation, usually by formal legal process
To get back, to regain (a physical thing; in astronomy and navigation, sight of a thing or a signal).
A position of holding a firearm during exercises, whereby the lock is at shoulder height and the sling facing out.
To destroy; to kill.
To advance (a runner on base) by batting the ball so it can be fielded, placing the batter out, but with insufficient time to put the runner out.
To offer (something) as a gift to a deity.
To give away (something valuable) to get at least a possibility of gaining something else of value (such as self-respect, trust, love, freedom, prosperity), or to avoid an even greater loss.
To intentionally give up (a piece) in order to improve one’s position on the board.
To trade (a value of higher worth) for something of lesser worth in order to gain something else valued more, such as an ally or business relationship, or to avoid an even greater loss; to sell without profit to gain something other than money.
To kill a test animal for autopsy.
A loss of profit.
The offering of anything to a god; a consecratory rite.
Something sacrificed.
The destruction or surrender of anything for the sake of something else; the devotion of something desirable to something higher, or to a calling deemed more pressing.
A play in which the batter is intentionally out so that one or more runners can advance around the bases.