Dictionary Definition
sacrifice
Noun
1 the act of losing or surrendering something as
a penalty for a mistake or fault or failure to perform etc. [syn:
forfeit, forfeiture]
2 personnel that are sacrificed (e.g.,
surrendered or lost in order to gain an objective)
3 a loss entailed by giving up or selling
something at less than its value; "he had to sell his car at a
considerable sacrifice"
4 the act of killing (an animal or person) in
order to propitiate a deity [syn: ritual
killing]
5 (sacrifice) an out that advances the base
runners
Verb
1 endure the loss of; "He gave his life for his
children"; "I gave two sons to the war" [syn: give]
2 kill or destroy; "The animals were sacrificed
after the experiment"; "The general had to sacrifice several
soldiers to save the regiment"
3 sell at a loss
4 make a sacrifice of; in religious rituals
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From Latin sacrificium, the noun sacrifice, from the verb sacrificare, from sacer, sacred, + -ficium, deed, from the verb facere, do or make.Pronunciation
Verb
- To offer as a gift to a deity.
- To give away something valuable to get at least a
possibility to gain something else of value (such as self-respect,
trust, love, freedom, prosperity), or to avoid an even greater
loss.
- “If you trade a penny for a dollar, it is not a sacrifice, if you trade a dollar for a penny, it is.” - From the book Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand.
- “Don’t you break my heart / ’Cause I sacrifice to make you happy.” - From the song Baby Don’t You Do It by Marvin Gaye
- “God sacrificed His only-begotten Son, so that all people might have eternal life.”
- To intentionally give up a piece in order to improve one’s position on the board.
- To advance a runner on base by batting the ball so it can be caught or fielded, placing the batter out, but with insufficient time to put the runner out.
- To sell without profit.
Related terms
Translations
to offer as a gift to a deity
- Arabic: ,
- Chinese: 祭献 (jìxiàn)
- Croatian: žrtvovati
- Czech: obětovat
- Danish: ofre
- Dutch: offeren
- trreq Esperanto
- Finnish: uhrata
- French: sacrifier
- German: opfern
- trreq Hebrew
- Hungarian: feláldoz
- Icelandic: fórna
- Italian: sacrificare
- Kurdish:
- Norwegian: ofre
- Portuguese: sacrificar
- Russian: жертвовать (žértvovat’) , пожертвовать (požértvovat’) ; приносить в жертву (prinosít’ v žértvu)
- Slovak: obetovať, obetovať sa
- Slovene: žrtvovati
- Spanish: sacrificar
- Swedish: offra
- Turkish: kurban etmek
to give away something valuable in order to gain
something else of value
- Croatian: žrtvovati
- Czech: obětovat
- Danish: ofre
- Dutch: offeren
- Finnish: uhrata
- French: sacrifier
- German: opfern
- Icelandic: fórna
- Italian: sacrificare
- Kurdish: , ,
- Lithuanian: aukoti
- Norwegian: ofre
- Portuguese: sacrificar
- Russian: жертвовать (žértvovat’) , пожертвовать (požértvovat’)
- Slovak: obetovať, obetovať sa
- Slovene: žrtvovati
- Spanish: sacrificar
- Swedish: offra
Noun
Translations
something sacrificed
- Arabic:
- Catalan: sacrifici
- Chinese: 犧牲, 牺牲 (xīshēng)
- Croatian: žrtva
- Czech: oběť
- Dutch: offer, opoffering
- trreq Esperanto
- Finnish: uhraus, uhri, uhrilahja
- French: sacrifice
- German: Opfer
- trreq Hebrew
- Hungarian: áldozat
- Icelandic: fórn
- Italian: sacrificio
- Japanese: 犠牲 (ぎせい, gisei)
- Korean: 희생 (huisaeng)
- Kurdish:
- Latin: sacrificum
- Norwegian: offer
- Old English: blōt, ġeblōt, lāc
- Persian: (qorbani)
- Polish: poświęcenie
- Portuguese: sacrifício
- Romanian: sacrificiu
- Russian: жертва
- Slovak: obeta
- Slovene: žrtev
- Spanish: sacrificio
- Swedish: offer
- Telugu: త్యాగం (tyaagam)
- trreq Turkish
Extensive Definition
Sacrifice (from a Middle
English verb meaning "to make sacred", from Old French,
from Latin
sacrificium: sacer, "sacred" + facere, "to make") is commonly known
as the practice of offering food or the lives of animals or people
to the gods as an act of
propitiation or
worship. The term is
also used metaphorically to describe
selfless good deeds for others or a short term loss in return for a
greater gain, such as in
a game of chess.
The practice of sacrifice is found in the oldest
human records. The archaeological record
contains human and animal corpses with sacrificial marks long
before any written records of the practice. Sacrifices are a common
theme in most religions, though the frequency of animal,
and especially human,
sacrifices are rare today.
Judaism
In Judaism, a sacrifice is known as a Korban, from the Hebrew root karov, meaning "to [come] close [to God]".The centrality of sacrifices in Judaism is clear,
with much of the Bible, particularly
the opening chapters of the book Leviticus,
detailing the exact method of bringing sacrifices. Sacrifices were
either bloody (animals) or unbloody (grain and wine). Bloody
sacrifices were divided into holocausts (burnt offerings, in which
the whole animal was burnt), guilt offerings (in which part was
burnt and part left for the priest) and peace offerings (in which
similarly only part of the animal was burnt). Yet the prophets
point out that sacrifices are only a part of serving God and need
to be accompanied by inner morality and goodness.
After the destruction of the Second
Temple, ritual sacrifice ceased except among the Samaritans (see
http://www.the-samaritans.com/festival.htm).
Maimonides, a
medieval Jewish rationalist, argued that God always held sacrifice
inferior to prayer and philosophical meditation. However, God
understood that the Israelites were used to the animal sacrifices
that the surrounding pagan tribes used as the primary way to
commune with their gods. As such, in Maimonides' view, it was only
natural that Israelites would believe that sacrifice was a
necessary part of the relationship between God and man. Maimonides
concludes that God's decision to allow sacrifices was a concession
to human psychological limitations. It would have been too much to
have expected the Israelites to leap from pagan worship to prayer
and meditation in one step. In the Guide
for the Perplexed, he writes:
- "But the custom which was in those days general among men, and the general mode of worship in which the Israelites were brought up consisted in sacrificing animals... It was in accordance with the wisdom and plan of God...that God did not command us to give up and to discontinue all these manners of service. For to obey such a commandment would have been contrary to the nature of man, who generally cleaves to that to which he is used; it would in those days have made the same impression as a prophet would make at present [the 12th Century] if he called us to the service of God and told us in His name, that we should not pray to God nor fast, nor seek His help in time of trouble; that we should serve Him in thought, and not by any action." (Book III, Chapter 32. Translated by M. Friedlander, 1904, The Guide for the Perplexed, Dover Publications, 1956 edition.)
In contrast, many others such as Nachmanides (in
his Torah commentary on Leviticus 1:9) disagreed, contending that
sacrifices are an ideal in Judaism, completely central.
Christianity
In Christian teaching, God became incarnate in Jesus Christ to accomplish the reconciliation of God and humanity, which had separated itself from God through sin (see the concept of original sin). According to the view that has dominated Western theology since early in the 2nd millennium, God's justice required an atonement for sin from humanity if human beings were to be restored to their place in creation and saved from damnation. However, God knew limited human beings could not make sufficient atonement, for humanity's offence to God was infinite, so God sent his only Son to become the sacrifice of the everlasting covenant. In Christian theology, this sacrifice replaced the insufficient animal sacrifice of the Old Covenant; Christ the "Lamb of God" replaced the lambs' sacrifice of the ancient Korban Todah (the Rite of Thanksgiving), chief of which is the Passover in the Mosaic law. Geza Vermes writes that the title "Lamb of God" does not necessarily refer to the metaphor of a sacrificial animal. He points out that in Galilean Aramaic, the word talya, literally "lamb", had the common meaning of "male child". This is akin to kid meaning "child" in modern colloquial English. The female equivalent of talya was talitha, literally "ewe lamb" and figuratively "girl" (the word is found in the narrative of the daughter of Jairus). Thus, "Lamb of God" could have been a slang means of saying "Son of God" or "God's Kid". This view differs from the traditional understanding of the phrase as it is used in reference to the acts of Jesus, and not merely his status as the Son of God.In the Roman
Catholic Church, the Eastern
Orthodox Churches, as well as among some High Church
Anglicans, the Eucharist or
Mass, and the Divine
Liturgy of the Eastern
Catholic Churches and Eastern
Orthodox Church, is seen as a sacrifice. It is however, not a
separate or additional sacrifice to that Christ on the cross; it is
rather the exact same sacrifice, which transcends time and space
("the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world") (Rev. 13:8),
renewed and made present, the only distinction being that it is
offered in an unbloody manner. The sacrifice is made present
without Christ dying or being crucified again; it is a
re-presentation to God, of the "once and for all" sacrifice of
Calvary by the now risen Christ, who continues to offer himself and
what he has done on the cross as an oblation to the Father. The
complete identification of the Mass with the sacrifice of the cross
is found in Christ's words at the last supper over the bread and
wine: "This is my body, which is given up for you," and "This is my
blood of the new covenant, which is shed...unto the forgiveness of
sins." The bread and wine, offered by Melchizedek in
sacrifice in the old covenant (Genesis 14:18; Psalm 110:4), are
transformed through the Mass into the body and blood of Christ (see
transubstantiation;
note: the Orthodox Church does not hold as dogma, as do Catholics,
the doctrine of transubstantiation, preferring rather to not make
an assertion regarding the "how" of the sacraments), and the offering
becomes one with that of Christ on the cross. In the Mass as on the
cross, Christ is both priest (offering the sacrifice) and victim
(the sacrifice he offers is himself), though in the Mass in the
former capacity he works through a solely human priest who is
joined to him through the sacrament of Holy Orders
and thus shares in Christ's priesthood. Through the Mass, the
merits of the one sacrifice of the cross can be applied to the
redemption of those present, to their specific intentions and
prayers, and to the redemption of the souls in purgatory. A
prophecy of the sacrifice of the Mass, offered in every corner of
the world, is found in the Book of Malachi in the Old
Testament: "from the rising of the sun to the going down of the
same, my name has been glorified among the Gentiles, and in every
place incense is offered to my name, and a pure offering, for my
name is great among the Gentiles" (Mal. 1:10-11).
The concept of self-sacrifice and martyrs are central to
Christianity. Often found in Catholic and Orthodox Christianity is
the idea of joining one's own sufferings to the sacrifice of Christ
on the cross. Thus one can offer up involuntary suffering, such as
illness, or purposefully embrace suffering in acts of penance, such
as fasting. Some Protestants criticize this as a denial of the
all-sufficiency of Christ's sacrifice, but it finds support in St.
Paul: "Now I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and in my
flesh I complete what is lacking in Christ's afflictions for the
sake of his body, that is, the church" (Col 1:24). Pope John Paul
II explained in his encyclical Salvifici
Doloris:"In the Cross of Christ not only is the Redemption
accomplished through suffering, but also human suffering itself has
been redeemed...Every man has his own share in the Redemption. Each
one is also called to share in that suffering through which the
Redemption was accomplished...In bringing about the Redemption
through suffering, Christ has also raised human suffering to the
level of the Redemption. Thus each man, in his suffering, can also
become a sharer in the redemptive suffering of Christ...The
sufferings of Christ created the good of the world's redemption.
This good in itself is inexhaustible and infinite. No man can add
anything to it. But at the same time, in the mystery of the Church
as his Body, Christ has in a sense opened his own redemptive
suffering to all human suffering."Some Protestants reject the idea
of the Eucharist as a
sacrifice, inclining to see it as merely a holy meal (even if they
believe in a form of the real
presence of Christ in the bread and wine, as Lutherans do).
The more recent the origin of a particular tradition, the less
emphasis is placed on the sacrificial nature of the Eucharist. The
Catholic/Orthodox response is that the sacrifice of the Mass in the
New Covenant is that one sacrifice for sins on the cross which
transcends time offered in an unbloody manner, as discussed above,
and that Christ is the real priest at every Mass working through
mere human beings to whom he has granted the grace of a share in
his priesthood. Since the word priest carries heavy connotations of
"one who offers sacrifice", Protestants usually do not use it for
their clergy. Evangelical Protestantism emphasizes the importance
of a decision to accept
Christ's sacrifice on the Cross consciously and personally as
atonement for one's individual sins if one is to be saved—this is
known as "accepting Christ as one's personal Lord and
Savior".
The Orthodox Church sees the celebration of the
Eucharist as a continuation, rather than a reenactment, of the
Last
Supper, as Fr. John Matusiak (of the
OCA) says: "The Liturgy is not so much a reenactment of the
Mystical Supper or these events as it is a continuation of these
events, which are beyond time and space. Unlike many of the
Protestant bodies, the Orthodox also see the Eucharistic Liturgy as
a bloodless sacrifice, during which the bread and wine we offer to
God become the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ through the descent
and operation of the Holy Spirit, Who effects the change." This
view is witnessed to by the prayers of the Divine
Liturgy of St.
John Chrysostom, when the priest says: "Accept, O God, our
supplications, make us to be worthy to offer unto thee
supplications and prayers and bloodless sacrifices for all thy
people," and "Remembering this saving commandment and all those
things which came to pass for us: the cross, the grave, the
resurrection on the third day, the ascension into heaven, the
sitting down at the right hand, the second and glorious coming
again, Thine own of Thine own we offer unto Thee on behalf of all
and for all," and "… Thou didst become man and didst take the name
of our High Priest, and deliver unto us the priestly rite of this
liturgical and bloodless sacrifice…"
Islam
An animal sacrifice in Arabic is called ḏabiḥa (ذَبِيْحَة) or Qurban (قُرْبَان) . The term may have roots from the Jewish term Korban'; in some places such as in India/Pakistan, qurbani is always used for Islamic animal sacrifice. In the Islamic context, an animal sacrifice referred to as ḏabiḥa'' (ذَبِيْحَة) meaning "sacrifice as a ritual" is offered only in Eid ul-Adha. ..."therefore, to thy Lord turn in prayer and in Sacrifice. " (Nahr)-Al Quran, 108.2 Qurbani is an Islamic prescription for the affluent to share their good fortune with the needy in the community. On the occasion of Eid ul Adhaa, affluent Muslims all over the world perform the Sunnah of Prophet Ibrahim (Abraham) by sacrificing a goat or sheep. The meat is then divided into three equal parts. One part is retained by the person who performs the Qurbani. The second is given to his relatives. The third part is distributed to the poor. The Muslims say that this has nothing to do with blood and gore (Qur'an 22:37: "It is not their meat nor their blood, that reaches God. It is your piety that reaches Him..."). The sacrifice is done to help the poor and in remembrance of Prophet Abraham's willingness to sacrifice his son Ishmael at God's command. The sacrificial animal may be a lamb, a sheep, a goat, a camel or a cow. The animal must be healthy and conscious.The Islamic system of slaughter is called
Ḏabīḥah.
Hinduism
The Sanskrit Yajna is often translated as "sacrifice" but also means worship, devotion, offering, and oblation. It is especially used to describe the offering of ghee (clarified butter), grains, spices, and wood into a fire along with the chanting of sacred mantras. The fire represents Agni, the divine messenger who carries offerings to the Devas. The offerings can represent devotion, aspiration, and seeds of past karma. In Vedic times, Yajna commonly included the sacrifice of milk, ghee, curd, grains, and the soma plant—animal offerings were less common. In modern times, Yajna is often performed at weddings and funerals, and in personal worship. Sacrifice in Hinduism can also refer to personal surrender through acts of inner and outer worship. http://www.khoda19.blogfa.com/post-176.aspxSacrifice by type of offering
Animal sacrifice
Animal sacrifice is the ritual killing of an
animal as part of a
religion. It is
practiced by many religions as a means of appeasing a god or gods
or changing the course of nature. Animal sacrifice has turned up in
almost all cultures, from the Hebrews to the
Greeks and
Romans
(particularly the purifying ceremony Lustratio) and
from the Aztecs to the
Yoruba.
However, the practice was a taboo among the Ancient
Egyptians, and they tended to look down on cultures that
practiced this custom. Animal sacrifice is still practiced today by
the followers of Santería and
other lineages of Orisa as a means of curing the sick and giving
thanks to the Orisa (gods). However in Santeria, such
animal offerings constitute an extremely small portion of what are
termed ebos—ritual activities that include offerings, prayer and
deeds. Some villages in Greece also sacrifice animals to Orthodox
saints in a practise known as kourbània. The practise, while
publicly condemned, is often tolerated for the benefits it provides
to the church and the sense of community it engenders.
Human sacrifice
Human
sacrifice was practiced by many ancient cultures. People would
be ritually killed in a manner that was supposed to please or
appease a god or spirit.
While not widely known, human sacrifices for religious reasons
still exist today in a number of nations.
Some occasions for human sacrifice found in
multiple cultures on multiple continents include:
- Human sacrifice to accompany the dedication of a new temple or bridge.
- Sacrifice of people upon the death of a king, high priest or great leader; the sacrificed were supposed to serve or accompany the deceased leader in the next life.
- Human sacrifice in times of natural disaster. Droughts, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, etc. were seen as a sign of anger or displeasure by deities, and sacrifices were supposed to lessen the divine ire.
Some of the best known ancient human sacrifices
were those practiced by various Pre-Columbian
civilizations of Mesoamerica.
The Aztec
were particularly noted for practicing this on an unusually large
scale; a human sacrifice would be made every day to aid the
sun in rising, the
dedication of the great temple at Tenochtitlán
was reportedly marked with the sacrificing of thousands, and there
are multiple accounts of captured Conquistadores
being sacrificed during the wars of the Spanish conquest of
Mexico.
In Scandinavia,
the old Scandinavian
religion contained human sacrifice, and both the Norse sagas
and German historians relate of this, see e.g. Temple at
Uppsala and Blót.
There is evidence to suggest Pre-Hellenic
Minoan
cultures practised human sacrifice. Sacrificed corpses were found
at a number of sites in the citadel of Knossos in Crete. The north
house at Knossos contained the bones of children who appeared to
have been butchered. It is possible they may have been for human
consumption as was the tradition with sacrificial offerings made in
Pre-Hellenic Civilization.
http://projectsx.dartmouth.edu/history/bronze_age/lessons/les/15.html
The myth of Theseus and the
Minotaur
(set in the labyrinth at Knossos) provides evidence that human
sacrifice was commonplace. In the myth, we are told that Athens sent seven
young men and seven young women to Crete as human sacrifices to the
Minotaur. This ties up well with the archaeological evidence that
most sacrifices were of young adults or children.
Human sacrifice still happens today as an
underground practice in some traditional religions, for example in
muti killings. Human
sacrifice is no longer officially condoned in any country, and
these cases are regarded as murder.
In Hindu narratives, practising human sacrifice
and eating human meat was a work of the demons (see Demon).
In the Aeneid by Virgil, the
character Sinon claims that he
was going to be a human sacrifice to Poseidon to calm
the seas (of course Sinon was lying).
Other aspects
Self sacrifice
Self-sacrifice, the act of deliberately following a course of action that has a high risk or certainty of suffering or death (which could otherwise be avoided), in order to achieve a perceived benefit for certain others, is a powerful theme with a well-established place in many cultures, myths, and societies. Self-sacrifice may also be more broadly defined as selflessness, or the readiness to inflict pain upon yourself to save others; it is this definition which, for example, Leo Tolstoy embraced and espoused.Sacrifice in games
Sacrifice is also used metaphorically to describe a number of plays in games. Sacrifices, in this sense, are plays that lose pieces or opportunities in order to obtain a more important advantage.In chess, a number of exchanges
are described as sacrifices:
these typically involve losing a piece or a pawn to
disrupt the opponent's formation and open up an attack. Chess
openings that involve sacrifices are usually called "gambits" by chess players; in
these gambits, usually a pawn is deliberately lost; gambits that
lose a piece are rare and risky.
In contract
bridge, a sacrifice
is a deliberate higher level bid of a contract which is likely to
fail, in the hope that the adverse cost of the failure will still
be less than the opponents' likely successful scores would have
been.
In baseball, a sacrifice
fly is a play in which a batter hits a fly ball deep into the
outfield for an out so as to enable a runner on any base, depending
on the runner's speed, to score. Likewise, a sacrifice
bunt in baseball is one in which a batter deliberately allows
himself to be put out while advancing a teammate to second and/or
third base, from where he has a greater chance to score. Players
who commit either a sacrifice fly or bunt are not charged with a
"time at bat," thus the out that they sacrificed is not charged
against their batting average.
In a few role-playing
games, some characters have the ability to give up their
hit
points in order to restore all others' hit points and
magic
points.
See also
External links
Further reading
- Human Sacrifice: In History and Today
- Heinsohn, Gunnar: "The Rise of Blood Sacrifice and Priest Kingship in Mesopotamia: A Cosmic Decree?" http://www.kronia.com/library/journals/sacrfice.txt (also published in: Religion, Vol. 22, 1992)
- Sacrifice (Catholic Encyclopedia)
- Theory of Religion
- Understanding Religious Sacrifice
- Sacrifice: Its Nature and Function
References
sacrifice in Breton: Aberzh
sacrifice in Bulgarian: Жертвоприношение
sacrifice in Czech: Oběť
sacrifice in Danish: Ofring
sacrifice in German: Opfer (Religion)
sacrifice in Estonian: Ohverdamine
sacrifice in Modern Greek (1453-): Θυσία
sacrifice in Spanish: Sacrificio
sacrifice in Esperanto: Oferado
sacrifice in French: Sacrifice
sacrifice in Indonesian: Kurban
sacrifice in Italian: Sacrificio
sacrifice in Hebrew: קורבן
sacrifice in Lithuanian: Auka (religija)
sacrifice in Dutch: Offer (religie)
sacrifice in Japanese: 生贄
sacrifice in Polish: Ofiara (religia)
sacrifice in Portuguese: Sacrifício
sacrifice in Quechua: Wilancha
sacrifice in Russian: Жертвоприношение
sacrifice in Slovak: Obeť (náboženstvo)
sacrifice in Serbian: Жртвовање
sacrifice in Finnish: Uhraaminen
sacrifice in Swedish: Offer
sacrifice in Walloon: Sacrifiaedje
sacrifice in Samogitian: Apieravuojėms
sacrifice in Chinese: 牺牲
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abandon, abandonment, abjuration, abjure, altruism, annihilate, appease, bane, be bereaved of, bereave of
life, bereavement,
blood, bloodletting, bloodshed, braining, burnt offering, carry
away, carry off, cease,
cede, cession, chloroform, close out,
collection, commitment, consecrate, consecration, convert into
cash, cost, cut down, cut
off, cut under, damage,
dead loss, dealing death, debit, dedicate, dedication, default, denial, denudation, deprivation, deprive of
life, desist, despoilment, destroy, destruction, destruction of
life, detriment,
devote, devotion, disgorge, disinterest, disinterestedness,
dispatch, dispensation, dispense
with, disposal, dispose
of, disposition,
dispossession,
divestment, do away
with, do for, do to death, do without, donate, drink offering, drop, dump, dumping, effect a sale, end, eschew, euthanasia, ex voto offering,
execute, execution, expense, exterminate, extermination, finish, finish off, flow of
blood, forbear, forfeit, forfeiture, forgo, forgoing, forswear, forswearing, get along
without, get rid of, getting rid of, give, give away, give up, giving
up, go astray from, gore,
have done with, heave offering, hecatomb, holocaust, human sacrifice,
humility, immolate, immolate before,
immolation, incense, incur loss, infanticide, injury, job, kill, killing, kiss good-bye, lapidation, launch into
eternity, lean over backwards, let go, let slip, letting go,
libation, liquidate, lose, lose out, loser, losing, losing streak, loss, lynch, mactation, make a sacrifice,
make a sale, make away with, make propitiation, make sacrifice to,
market, martyr, martyrdom, martyrization, martyrize, merchandise, mercy killing,
mislay, misplace, miss, modesty, move, oblation, offer, offer sacrifice, offer up,
offering, offertory, part with, peace
offering, perdition,
piacular offering, poison, poisoning, privation, propitiate, purge, put away, put down, put to
death, put to sleep, quitclaim, recant, recantation, refrain from,
release, relinquish, relinquishment, remove
from life, render up, renounce, renunciation, resell, resign, resignation, retail, retract, retraction, riddance, ritual killing,
ritual murder, robbery,
ruin, sacramental offering,
scapegoat,
self-abasement, self-abnegation, self-denial, self-devotion,
self-effacement, self-forgetfulness, self-immolation, self-neglect,
self-neglectfulness, self-renouncement, self-sacrifice,
self-subjection, selflessness, sell, sell off, sell on
consignment, sell out, sell over, sell retail, sell short, sell up,
sell wholesale, shooting, slaughter, slay, slaying, spare, spoliation, starve, stoning, stop, stripping, suffer loss,
surrender, suttee, sutteeism, swear off, swearing
off, take life, take off, taking away, taking of life, thank
offering, throw up, total loss, turn into money, turn over,
unacquisitiveness,
undercut, undergo
privation, undersell,
unload, unpossessiveness,
unselfishness,
vacate, victimize, votive offering,
waive, wander from, whole
offering, wholesale,
yield, yielding