How To Use Save-all In A Sentence
-
The business of the dairy, like the feeding of hogs and poultry, is originally carried on as a save-all.
XI. Book I. Of the Rent of Land
-
As long as the world was content to take our manufactures as we chose to make them -- when, no other nation having entered the lists with us, we were without competitors, and absolute masters of the commerce of the world, this make-all save-all principle was undoubtedly the most effective.
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 53, No. 327, January, 1843
-
These, as they are fed with what would otherwise be lost, are a mere save-all; and as they cost the farmer scarce any thing, so he can afford to sell them for very little.
XI. Book I. Of the Rent of Land
-
Epergne, perhaps _épargne_, a save-all or hold-all.
Notes and Queries, Number 48, September 28, 1850
-
All candles, whatever their material, were carefully used by the economical colonists to the last bit by a little wire frame of pins and rings called a save-all.
Home Life in Colonial Days
-
She was some miles inshore of us, and as the day brightened we made her out to be a brigantine (an uncommon rig in those days), standing across our bows, with all studding sails set on the starboard side, indeed everything that could pull, including water sails and save-all.
Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, 1995, Memorial Issue
-
The hog, that finds his food among ordure, and greedily devours many things rejected by every other useful animal, is, like poultry, originally kept as a save-all.
XI. Book I. Of the Rent of Land
-
In reply, however, I assured him that I MUST waste myself willy-nilly, and that the "Review" was only a save-all.
The Life and Letters of Thomas Henry Huxley
-
To explain every little mark of usury and covetousness, such as the mortgages, bonds, indentures, &c. the piece of candle stuck on a save-all, on the mantle-piece; the rotten furniture of the room, and the miserable contents of the dusty wardrobe, would be unnecessary: we shall only notice the more striking articles.
The Works of William Hogarth: In a Series of Engravings With Descriptions, and a Comment on Their Moral Tendency