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endow
[ en-dou ]
verb (used with object)
- to provide with a permanent fund or source of income:
to endow a college.
- to furnish, as with some talent, faculty, or quality; equip:
Nature has endowed her with great ability.
Synonyms: , ,
- Obsolete. to provide with a dower.
verb (used without object)
- (of a life-insurance policy) to become payable; yield its conditions.
endow
/ 瑟苍藞诲补蕣 /
verb
- to provide with or bequeath a source of permanent income
- usually foll by with to provide (with qualities, characteristics, etc)
- obsolete.to provide with a dower
Derived Forms
- 别苍藞诲辞飞别谤, noun
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 别苍路诲辞飞路别谤 noun
- 谤别路别苍路诲辞飞 verb (used with object)
- 蝉耻路辫别谤路别苍路诲辞飞 verb (used with object)
- 耻苍路别苍路诲辞飞路颈苍驳 adjective
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of endow1
Example Sentences
Director David Cromer, whose sensibility gravitates between stark and dark, endows the staging with macabre elegance.
Another place Trump has had his eye on is Greenland - which is endowed with the eighth largest reserves of rare earth elements.
Because even the robber barons were not that bad; at least they endowed some libraries and foundations and fellowships and had some idea of wanting to pretend to some sort of cultural capital.
Noted physicist Stephen Hawking, a supporter of the Palestinian cause, participated in an academic boycott of Israel and endowed an astronomy chair at a university in the West Bank.
It was as if talking money, and earning it, would act as a vaccine that endowed our family with immunity against all those nasty lethal airborne pathogens.
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