0 past simple and past participle of endorse --
1 to make a public statement of your approval or support for something or someone: --
They paid $2 million to the world champion to endorse their new aftershave.
formal I fully endorse (= agree with) everything the Chairperson has said.
The Council is expected to endorse the committee's recommendations.
2 to write something in order to give permission for something, especially your name on the back of a cheque, in order to make it payable (= able to be paid) to someone else --
3 to officially record on a driving licence that the driver has been found guilty of driving in an illegal way --
Examination of the events endorsed indicated that the most common one was birth or adoption of a sibling or move to a new home.
The councillors now endorsed the various exclusionary guild restrictions.
What eventually emerged was a compromise that endorsed the principle of mandatory cleansing, but did little to combat ticks.
The data endorsed the claim that people abstract a contextual representation from experiencing the multiple natural linguistic contexts of a word.
Significantly, it was the colonial interpretation of sambandham that had endorsed the orthodox reading.
Some nonsomatic symptoms of depression were endorsed by more than half the sample.
Democratic incumbents may have benefited as well, since those who were endorsed were slightly more likely to win (88.6 per cent versus 82.3 per cent).
They also endorsed the contention that age alone could not fully explain or continually be used as an excuse for being physically inactive.