0 present participle of endorse
1 to make a public statement of your approval or support for something or someone:
The Council is expected to endorse the committee's recommendations.
formal I fully endorse (= agree with) everything the Chairperson has said.
They paid $2 million to the world champion to endorse their new aftershave.
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
The president doesn't endorse products himself regardless of their merits.
In inheriting the value frames of elite rhetoric, citizens may end up endorsing values from both sides of the partisan divide.
Girls may not perceive their own behavior as depressed, although parents may be accurately endorsing internalizing symptoms.
They responded to the uncertainty resulting from the change in the electoral system by endorsing numerous group-supported candidates and celebrities.