0 to give a large amount of money to pay for creating a college, hospital, etc. or to provide an income for it:
1 to give money that will provide an income for a college or university, a hospital, or other organization:
In 1937, Mellon endowed the National Gallery of Art.
2 If someone or something is endowed with a particular quality or feature, the person or thing naturally has that quality or feature:
3 to give a large amount of money to pay for creating a college, hospital, etc., or to provide an income for it:
$1.5 million was donated to endow a university chair in his name.
Exploitive agents endowed with the ability to interact selectively succeed in defending against invasion because they induce a highly non-interactive world.
The omni-directional mobile platform endows the robot with the holonomic mobility on plane.
What it is possible for an agent to know is constrained in crucial part by the cognitive capacities with which she is endowed.
The actress's gesture liberated the object from its material function and endowed it with signals which evoked a metaphoric connection.
Each debtor and banker is endowed with one unit of nonstorable labor when young (and nothing when old).
There is a single consumption good; each agent is endowed with w > 0 units of this good when young and none when old.
Unlike the introductory movement, environmental recordings are seldom perceived, and the whole movement is endowed with a distinctly abstract character.
Their strong morphological identity endows them with a very differentiated character rendering them most distinct and recognisable.
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