释义 |
endorsement
en·dorse·ment E0137000 (ĕn-dôrs′mənt)n.1. The act of endorsing.2. The signature on a check, contract, instrument, or other document endorsing it.3. Approbation; sanction; support: The candidates competed for the union's endorsement.4. An amendment or addition to an insurance policy, as to cover special circumstances.endorsement (ɪnˈdɔːsmənt) or indorsementn1. the act or an instance of endorsing2. something that endorses, such as a signature or qualifying comment3. approval or support4. (Law) a record of a motoring offence on a driving licence5. (Insurance) insurance a clause in or amendment to an insurance policy allowing for alteration of coverageen•dorse•ment (ɛnˈdɔrs mənt) n. 1. approval or sanction. 2. the placing of one's signature, instructions, etc., on a document. 3. a signature or instructions placed on the back of a check or other document, as for the purpose of assigning one's interest therein to another. 4. a clause under which the stated coverage of an insurance policy may be altered. [1540–50; compare Anglo-French endorsement] ThesaurusNoun | 1. | endorsement - a promotional statement (as found on the dust jackets of books); "the author got all his friends to write blurbs for his book"blurb, indorsementpromotion, promotional material, publicity, packaging - a message issued in behalf of some product or cause or idea or person or institution; "the packaging of new ideas" | | 2. | endorsement - a speech seconding a motion; "do I hear a second?"secondment, indorsement, secondagreement - the verbal act of agreeing | | 3. | endorsement - formal and explicit approval; "a Democrat usually gets the union's endorsement"imprimatur, sanction, countenance, warrant, indorsementcommendation, approval - a message expressing a favorable opinion; "words of approval seldom passed his lips"O.K., okay, okeh, okey, OK - an endorsement; "they gave us the O.K. to go ahead"visa - an endorsement made in a passport that allows the bearer to enter the country issuing itnihil obstat - the phrase used by the official censor of the Roman Catholic Church to say that a publication has been examined and contains nothing offensive to the church | | 4. | endorsement - a signature that validates something; "the cashier would not cash the check without an endorsement"indorsementsignature - your name written in your own handwritingblank endorsement, endorsement in blank - an endorsement on commercial paper naming no payee and so payable to the bearer | | 5. | endorsement - the act of endorsing; "a star athlete can make a lot of money from endorsements"indorsementsupport - aiding the cause or policy or interests of; "the president no longer has the support of his own party"; "they developed a scheme of mutual support"aegis, auspices, protection - kindly endorsement and guidance; "the tournament was held under the auspices of the city council" |
endorsement indorsementnoun1. approval, backing, support, championing, favour, promotion, sanction, recommendation, acceptance, agreement, warrant, confirmation, upholding, subscription, fiat, advocacy, affirmation, ratification, authorization, seal of approval, approbation, espousal, O.K. or okay (informal) This is a powerful endorsement of his style of governing.endorsementnoun1. The approving of an action, especially when done by one in authority:allowance, approbation, approval, authorization, consent, leave, license, permission, permit, sanction.Informal: OK.2. An indication of commendation or approval:backing, recommendation, support.Translationsendorse (inˈdoːs) verb1. to write one's signature on the back of (a cheque). 背書(在支票背面) 在(支票等)背面签名 2. to make a note of an offence on (a driving licence). 註上違規記錄(在駕照上) (驾驶执照上)注上违章记录 3. to give one's approval to (a decision, statement etc). The court endorsed the judge's decision. 贊同, 認可 赞同,认可 enˈdorsement noun 簽註,背書,贊同 签注,背书,赞同 Endorsement
Endorsement a transfer signature, that is, a signature written on the back of a draft, check, bill of lading, or some other type of security to establish transfer of legal title of these documents from one person (the endorser) to another. The endorsement may be a full endorsement, that is, an endorsement to the order of a person (indicating to whom or to whose order the document is transferred), or a blank endorsement (to bearer). The endorsement on a draft or check makes the endorser liable for the amount indicated on the document. endorsement
endorsement [en-dors´ment] the examination by a State Board of Nursing of the credentials of a nurse licensed in a different state, and the determination that the nurse is eligible to receive a nursing license in the second state.endorsement
EndorsementA signature on a Commercial Paper or document. An endorsement on a negotiable instrument, such as a check or a promissory note, has the effect of transferring all the rights represented by the instrument to another individual. The ordinary manner in which an individual endorses a check is by placing his or her signature on the back of it, but it is valid even if the signature is placed somewhere else, such as on a separate paper, known as an allonge, which provides a space for a signature. The term endorsement is also spelled indorsement. For examples of different types of endorsements, see indorsement. endorsement (indorsement)n. 1) the act of the owner or payee signing his/her name to the back of a check, bill of exchange, or other negotiable instrument so as to make it payable to another or cashable by any person. An endorsement may be made after a specific direction ("pay to Dolly Madison" or "for deposit only"), called a qualified endorsement, or with no qualifying language, thereby making it payable to the holder, called a blank endorsement. There are also other forms of endorsement which may give credit or restrict the use of the check. 2) the act of pledging or committing support to a program, proposal, or candidate. (See: negotiable instrument) endorsement 1 see INDORSEMENT. 2 the marking of the details of a conviction on a driving licence. It is now the penalty points rather than the endorsements themselves that are of importance. See TOTTING UP. ENDORSEMENT. Vide Indorsement. endorsement
Endorsement1. The payee's signature on the back of a check indicating that the payee has received the check. Banks require that payees endorse checks before they may be cashed or deposited.
2. An amendment to a document, especially an insurance policy. Informally, they are called riders.endorsement An owner's signature that serves to transfer the legal rights to a negotiable certificate to another party.endorsement(also spelled indorsement) Placing one's signature on the back of a check or other negotiable instrument in order to transfer ownership to another.Endorsers warrant payment of the instrument unless they sign with the additional words “without recourse.” endorsement
Synonyms for endorsementnoun approvalSynonyms- approval
- backing
- support
- championing
- favour
- promotion
- sanction
- recommendation
- acceptance
- agreement
- warrant
- confirmation
- upholding
- subscription
- fiat
- advocacy
- affirmation
- ratification
- authorization
- seal of approval
- approbation
- espousal
- O.K. or okay
Synonyms for endorsementnoun the approving of an action, especially when done by one in authoritySynonyms- allowance
- approbation
- approval
- authorization
- consent
- leave
- license
- permission
- permit
- sanction
- OK
noun an indication of commendation or approvalSynonyms- backing
- recommendation
- support
Synonyms for endorsementnoun a promotional statement (as found on the dust jackets of books)SynonymsRelated Words- promotion
- promotional material
- publicity
- packaging
noun a speech seconding a motionSynonyms- secondment
- indorsement
- second
Related Wordsnoun formal and explicit approvalSynonyms- imprimatur
- sanction
- countenance
- warrant
- indorsement
Related Words- commendation
- approval
- O.K.
- okay
- okeh
- okey
- OK
- visa
- nihil obstat
noun a signature that validates somethingSynonymsRelated Words- signature
- blank endorsement
- endorsement in blank
noun the act of endorsingSynonymsRelated Words- support
- aegis
- auspices
- protection
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