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Difference between Lifeguard and Life preserver

lifeguard

1. a person assigned to watch against accidents to bathers at a beach, etc.:

  • When a party bathe, one or two of the best swimmers should be posted as lifeguards.

2. a device attached to a locomotive for sweeping obstructions from the track:

  • Had not the lifeguard protected the wheels of the engine the train would have been thrown off the line.

life preserver

1. a life belt or other device used in saving life at sea:

  • Taking a life preserver, I ventured into one of the little canoes.

2. a bludgeon loaded with lead, intended for selfdefense:

  • The prisoner was given in charge to the police, a life preserver having been found upon him.

3. smth. that may help a person in a critical situation:

  • He was busy preparing a “life preserver” in the form of stolen documents he could use later.

Note: Neither compound fully correlates in meaning with lifesaver

1. = lifeguard 1:

  • …mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, by which a life-saver inflates a victim’s lungs with his own breath.

2. = life preserver 3:

  • Again many thanks for the money you sent. It was a life-saver.

3. a candy shaped like a small life-belt:

  • The American soldiers gave us chocolate bars, life saver candies, chewing gums…