Endorse, Endorsement
endorse (verb) - publicly support or approve of something
endorsement (noun) - a public statement of support and approval
endorse x as y
seek endorsement
withhold endorsement
withdraw endorsement
officially endorse
broadly endorse
enthusiastically endorse
wholeheartedly endorse
endorse the deal
declined to endorse the deal
win endorsement from
endorse recommendations
endorse an action
effectively endorses
fully endorse
unreservedly endorses
strongly endorses
the report endorses it
refuse to endorse
explicitly endorsed
endorses x's thinking on
endorse the recommendations in the report
endorse voluntarily
shareholders ask the board of directors to endorse x
win endorsement from
endorse a product
a product endorsement
a sports hero endorses
a celebrity endorsement
endorse a person
endorse principles
the report endorses
endorse the change
endorse rules
endorse a check
endorse funding
endorse an attitude
endorse the view that
Example sentences:
* Facing a lawsuit they declined for now to endorse the deal.
* The rules are not binding on members, but corporations may endorse them voluntarily.
* The shareholders will ask the Board tommorrow to endorse the plan.
* The Foreign Business Act has never explicitly endorsed nominee shareholding.
* Her campaign for a seat in parliament won endorsement from many well-known celebrities.
* Sport's heroes endorse everything from tires to toothpaste on the huge advertising billboards that sit next to expressways.
* Venus Williams to Endorse Reebok [newspaper headlines]
* The committee will meet next week to decide whether to endorse the investigting sub-committee's report recommending indictment.
* Woods and Nike signed an addendum to the current deal that will pay him more money to endorse Nike's new line of golf balls.
* Our firm fully endorses the recommendations in the report.
* It is therefore ironic that the report which it unreservedly endorses and which appears in the same issue should perpetuate the thinking I seek here to expose as muddled and erroneous. (Source: British National Corpus)
* We felt that there can be no question of fairness when the law effectively endorses unilateral decision.
* Our reader's letters page in this issue and earlier issues reflects the affection by which her British fans hold Steffi and her fan club membership endorses that popularity.
* The Report simply endorses Board of Education thinking on the educational value of English, and more particularly English literary works.
* If Microsoft endorses this product, it will likely become a standard.
* The Board of Directors endorsed 5 years funding for architectural education at the university.
* This removes any duty to create employment and endorses a laisser-faire attitude.
* The Labour party strongly endorsed the treaty.
* "World Energy Congress endorses green view." [newspaper headline]
* "A leaked UK government report endorses Malaysian forestry practices as 'sustainable', despite near-universal agreement that this is not the case."
* The Bank in this case endorses the change by bringing its intervention rates in line with the new base rate.
[Note: many sentences on this page are derived in whole or in part from a British National Corpus search such as "endorses"]






