0 present participle of found --
1 past simple and past participle of find --
3 to build a support in the ground for a large structure such as a building or road --
4 to base a belief, claim, idea, etc. on something: --
a society founded on egalitarian principles
I'd like to see the research that these recommendations are founded on.
Her lawyer accused the prosecution of founding its case on insufficient evidence.
However, the new historiography has had less impact on the contentious question of church-state relations in the founding era.
You were the first, founding president, up to 2003.
In effect, this paper suggests that founding a state may be the only group decision guaranteed to be consistent.
These models were founding members in a new class of ' second-generation' models that account for dynamic ion concentration changes.
By the late nineteenth century, the role of church groups in founding and maintaining such institutions had largely been supplanted by the state.
There were no heroes or founding fathers to become the subject of later mythology.
While donors generously finance post-conflict or founding elections, funds become scarcer for subsequent electoral contests.
The founding dualism of physics enshrines the independent status of eternal general laws and time-dependent contingent states.