0 present participle of establish --
1 to start a company or organization that will continue for a long time: --
2 to cause something or someone to be accepted in or familiar with a place, position, etc.: --
He has established himself as the leading candidate in the election.
After three months we were well established in/at our new house/new jobs.
He's established himself as a dependable source of information.
His reputation for carelessness was established long before the latest problems arose.
Establishing mechanisms of redress, compensation and accountability has already generated considerable political heat.
These studies have the advantage of establishing exposure without the bias of already knowing the disease outcome.
The way governments overcome the economic, political, social and administrative constraints determines the success of establishing an effective tax administration.
Establishing divergence times within the animal kingdom will allow researchers to better understand the historical interactions between the evolution of life and major environmental events.
The presented architecture assists the knowledge engineer in establishing a proper framework for this type of formalisation.
Establishing aims for the artistic work was especially important and would help in both the initial idea stage and the later development of the work.
The biggest obstacle to establishing participation rights for indigenous peoples in a treaty would have arisen from the factual setting.
They relate the apparent restrictions to questions of rich\poor morphology, establishing thereby a link between morphology and configurational aspects of argument structure.