Reservation /(r?z`?r-v?"sh?n)/
Res·er·va·tion
Reservation
n.
-
The act of reserving, or keeping back; concealment, or withholding from disclosure; reserve.
With reservation of an hundred knights.
Make some reservation of your wrongs.
- Something withheld, either not expressed or disclosed, or not given up or brought forward.
- A tract of the public land reserved for some special use, as for schools, for the use of Indians, etc. [U.S.]
- The state of being reserved, or kept in store.
- A clause in an instrument by which some new thing is reserved out of the thing granted, and not in esse before. (Law)
- The portion of the sacramental elements reserved for purposes of devotion and for the communion of the absent and sick. (Eccl.)
- an agreement to have some space, service or other acommodation, as at a hotel, a restaurant, or on a public transport system, held for one's future use; also, the record or receipt for such an agreement, or the contractual obligation to retain that accommodation; as, a hotel reservation; a reservation on a flight to Dallas; to book a reservation at the Ritz.
Phrases & Compounds
- Mental reservation
- the withholding, or failing to disclose, something that affects a statement, promise, etc., and which, if disclosed, would materially change its import.