endorse
definition from
Oxford Dictionary of English -
endorse /ɪnˈdɔːs , , ɛnˈdɔːs/ (US & Law also indorse)
▸ verb [with object]
1 declare one's public approval or support of:
the report was endorsed by the college.
recommend (a product) in an advertisement:
he earns more money endorsing sports clothes than playing football.
2 sign (a cheque or bill of exchange) on the back to make it payable to someone other than the stated payee or to accept responsibility for paying it.
write (a comment) on a document:
the speed and accuracy achieved will be endorsed on the certificate.
3 (in the UK) mark (a driving licence) with the penalty points given as a punishment for a driving offence:
his licence was endorsed with five points
she's had her licence endorsed.
4 (endorse someone out) (in South Africa under apartheid) order a black person to leave an urban area for failing to meet certain requirements of the Native Laws Amendment Act:
a further 500,000 blacks had been endorsed out of urban areas under the pass laws.
– DERIVATIVES
endorsable adjective
endorser /ɪnˈdɔːsə , , ɛnˈdɔːsə / noun
– ORIGIN late 15th century (in the sense ‘write on the back of’; formerly also as indorse): from medieval Latin indorsare, from Latin in- ‘in, on’ + dorsum ‘back’.
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