0 someone, especially a well-known person, who appears in an advertisement saying that they use and like a particular product:
The footballer is the company's first male celebrity endorser.
1 someone who makes a public statement saying that they support someone or something:
2 the person who signs the back of a cheque, bill of exchange, etc. written out to them in order to give permission for it to be paid to someone else:
And it is likely that endorsers of the epistemological argument - my target - also make it.
Legal difficulties might have arisen in retaining the liability of the endorser and the drawer unless the bill was duly presented.
You could only do that by releasing the endorsers and the drawers and simply retaining the liability of the acceptors.
I will come to the other neurosis, the neurotic obsessions about appearing to be the endorser of companies seeking deposits from the public, later.
It was the inevitable result of the release of the last endorser.
He not only provided a discount market, but he relieved the last endorser on each bill that was brought to the bank.
The provision was such that every last endorser was relieved.
The second alternative was to attempt to restore the old machinery of business by releasing the drawer and the endorser and maintaining the liability of the acceptor.