0 to protect yourself against risk by regularly paying a special company that will provide a fixed amount of money if you are killed or injured or if your home or possessions are damaged, destroyed, or stolen: --
1 to make something certain, or to be certain about something: --
[ T ] We had reporters check to insure the accuracy of the story.
[ + (that) clause ] Because of the importance of the game, we wanted to insure (that) it would be televised.
2 to protect yourself or your property against damage or loss by making regular payments to a company that will pay for the damage or loss if it happens: --
3 to protect yourself against risk by buying insurance from a company that will provide an agreed amount of money if a particular event happens, for example if you are killed or injured or if your possessions are damaged or stolen: --
This force feedback is needed for security constraints and to insure regularity and quality of parts.
Employers can insure against sickness absence with private insurers, who levy experience-rated premiums.
In other words, the moral hazard cost associated with failing to insure only a standardized portfolio is equal to 15 % of the current unfunded liability.
More importantly, social security can partially insure individuals against different types of risk when asset markets are incomplete.
Although many studies have reported such neglect, most have used a single "paper-and-pencil" question with no special care taken to insure attentive and motivated subjects.
And even for the fully insured the introduction of managed care has seen the emergence of problems that distort the ethical possibilities of healthcare.
This general criterion not only allows one to optimize the force distribution but also indirectly insures the stability by minimizing roll and pitch angles.
To insure originality he set the rules of composition (which he never violated in his vocal productions) at defiance.