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    endow
    /ɪnˈdaʊ/

    verb

    • 1. provide with a quality, ability, or asset: "he was endowed with tremendous physical strength" Similar providesupplyfurnishequip
    • 2. give or bequeath an income or property to (a person or institution): "he endowed the Church with lands"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Endow means to give a large amount of money to pay for creating a college, hospital, etc. or to provide an income for it. It can also mean to be endowed with a particular quality or feature. See more meanings, idioms, examples and translations of endow.

  3. Learn the meaning of endow, a verb that means to furnish with an income, a dower, or something freely or naturally. See synonyms, examples, word history, and related phrases of endow.

  4. endow something to give a large sum of money to a school, a college or another institution to provide it with an income. In her will, she endowed a scholarship in the physics department. Oxford Collocations Dictionary. Word Origin. Definitions on the go.

  5. Endow means to give a large amount of money to pay for creating or supporting a college, hospital, etc. or to provide an income for it. It can also mean to have a particular quality or feature naturally. See different meanings, examples and translations of endow.

  6. Learn the meaning of endow as a verb, with different senses and usage examples. Find out how to pronounce endow, its synonyms, and its origin and derivation.

  7. If you've been endowed with something, it means you've been given a gift — most likely a gift that can't be returned or exchanged, like a sense of humor or athletic ability or trust. We usually use endow to refer to an ability or a quality, but you can endow someone with money, too.

  8. Endow means to have a particular quality or characteristic, or to give a large amount of money to a college, hospital, etc. See how to use endow in sentences and translations in different languages.