- to endorse a document
- расписываться на обороте документа
English-russian dctionary of contemporary Economics. 2014.
English-russian dctionary of contemporary Economics. 2014.
endorse — en·dorse also in·dorse /in dȯrs/ vt en·dorsed also in·dorsed, en·dors·ing, also, in·dors·ing [Anglo French endosser endorser and Medieval Latin indorsare, both ultimately from Latin in on + dorsum back] 1: to write on the back of; esp: to sign… … Law dictionary
endorse — [en dôrs′, indôrs′] vt. endorsed, endorsing [altered (after L) < ME endosen < OFr endosser < ML indorsare < L in, on, upon + dorsum, the back] 1. to write on the back of (a document); specif., a) to sign (one s name) as payee on the… … English World dictionary
endorse — in its modern marketing meaning ‘to give one s approval to (a product)’ was labelled by the Concise Oxford Dictionary in 1914 as ‘vulgar in advertisements’. Its original meaning is ‘to write on the back of (a document)’, from Latin dorsum ‘back’ … Modern English usage
endorse — endorsable, adj. endorser, endorsor, n. endorsingly, adv. endorsive, adj. /en dawrs /, v., endorsed, endorsing, n. v.t. 1. to approve, support, or sustain: to endorse a political candidate. 2. to designate oneself as payee of (a check) by signing … Universalium
endorse — Transferring asset ownership by signing the back of the asset s certificate. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary * * * endorse en‧dorse [ɪnˈdɔːs ǁ ˈdɔːrs] also indorse verb [transitive] 1. LAW … Financial and business terms
endorse — also indorse transitive verb ( dorsed; dorsing) Etymology: alteration of obsolete endoss, from Middle English endosen, from Anglo French endosser, to put on, don, write on the back of, from en + dos back, from Latin dorsum Date: 1581 1. a. to… … New Collegiate Dictionary
endorse — /ɛnˈdɔs / (say en daws), /ən / (say uhn ) verb (t) (endorsed, endorsing) 1. to write (something) on the back of a document, etc. 2. to sign one s name on (a commercial document or other instrument). 3. to designate (another) as payee by one s… …
endorse */*/ — UK [ɪnˈdɔː(r)s] / US [ɪnˈdɔrs] verb [transitive] Word forms endorse : present tense I/you/we/they endorse he/she/it endorses present participle endorsing past tense endorsed past participle endorsed 1) a) to express support for someone or… … English dictionary
endorse — en•dorse [[t]ɛnˈdɔrs[/t]] v. t. dorsed, dors•ing 1) to express approval or support of, esp. publicly: to endorse a political candidate[/ex] 2) to designate oneself as payee of (a check) by signing, usu. on the reverse side of the instrument 3)… … From formal English to slang
Endorse — To endorse is to write one s signature upon the back of a document, e.g. a bill, cheque, etc … International financial encyclopaedia
endorse — v.tr. (also indorse) 1 a confirm (a statement or opinion). b declare one s approval of. 2 sign or write on the back of (a document), esp. the back of (a bill, cheque, etc.) as the payee or to specify another as payee. 3 write (an explanation or… … Useful english dictionary