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    devote
    /dɪˈvəʊt/

    verb

    • 1. give all or most of one's time or resources to (a person or activity): "I wanted to devote more time to my family"
    • 2. invoke or pronounce a curse upon: archaic "the hostile army was devoted with dire execrations to the gods of war"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. The meaning of DEVOTE is to commit by a solemn act. How to use devote in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Devote.

  3. Devote definition: to give up or appropriate to or concentrate on a particular pursuit, occupation, purpose, cause, etc.. See examples of DEVOTE used in a sentence.

  4. devote, though it has some overtones of religious dedication, is the most general of the three terms: He devoted his free time to mastering the computer. dedicate is more solemn and carries an ethical or moral tone: We are dedicated to the achievement of equality for all. consecrate, even in nonreligious contexts, clearly implies a powerful and ...

  5. Devote means to give to. If you devote yourself to jump-roping, you might be found in your driveway every free moment of the day practicing. Nuns and priests are said to devote their lives to God. A knight in shining armor devotes himself to his lady.

  6. 1. to give up or apply to a particular pursuit, purpose, cause, etc.: to devote one's time to study. 2. to set apart or dedicate by a solemn or formal act; consecrate: to devote one's life to God. [1580–90; < Latin dēvōtus, past participle of dēvovēre to vow as a sacrifice = dē- de - + vōvēre to vow]

  7. devote meaning, definition, what is devote: to use all or most of your time, effort ...: Learn more.

  8. devote. Definition of devote verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.