0 present 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 --
Endorsing novelty is not claiming license to depart from the standard of empirical adequacy.
There is no need to interpret traditional descriptions of ' neuter passive ' participles as endorsing the view that ma/ta forms are morphosyntactically passive.
By voluntarily endorsing the rules that govern them, citizens endow a regime with an elusive but indispensable quality: political legitimacy.
After all, when we permit living donation, we are in fact indirectly endorsing a form of directed donation.
Perhaps participants were favoring a nondenominational, all encompassing "religious worldview" endorsing equally the religious beliefs of outgroups as much as those of the ingroup.
Lest this move be seen as endorsing divorce, many state legislatures attached a rigid set of rules and regulations to divorce.
One must be cautious in endorsing such a research program, as it can inhibit a deeper anthropological understanding.
Meanwhile, managers experience the additional pressures of overtly endorsing policy and demonstrating exemplary practice.