Similar words: endorse, endorsement, vendor, dorsal, candor, horse, worse, worsen. Meaning: [ɪn'dɔːs] adj. formally supported especially by public statement.
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61. The trade unions dominated the conference and endorsed the policies of their leaders.
62. The foods are prepared following the recommendations of various health bodies which are also endorsed by the Government.
63. The strike call was endorsed and Local Councils of Action were set up throughout the country, to await events.
64. The popular notion that words do not hurt you is by no means endorsed among women survivors of male violence.
65. Regional firms provided the best value for money, said 70% of executives, and only 6% endorsed London firms.
66. Mr. Hurd Britain supported Security Council resolution 716, which endorsed the aim of an international meeting.
67. The county council's Social Services committee endorsed the paper's key objectives at their meeting last week.
68. At the congress the party formally abandoned its Marxist-Leninist ideology and endorsed a multiparty democratic system.
69. A socialist Constitution was endorsed by referendum in July 1979.
70. In his speech, Dole specifically endorsed only one of them, an amendment mandating a balanced budget.
71. Dole has endorsed the concept of a flat tax but has been reluctant to commit to specifics.
72. It has also been endorsed by the city planning authority in the context of the Oxford Local Plan Review 1991-2001.
73. His main claim to fame was that he made the Chiquita guitar that Billy Gibbons endorsed about ten,(www.Sentencedict.com) fifteen years ago.
74. Both have endorsed expanding the IRA because it is a proven winner in increasing personal and national savings.
75. Forbes said he disapproves of abortion, but he has refused to endorsed a constitutional amendment banning the procedure.
76. Mr Hurd said the council had endorsed the screening procedure.
77. The non-computer-based local surveys established this stereotype as one that is widely endorsed.
78. Last autumn Mr Alton threatened to stand down after the party's Harrogate conference endorsed a strong pro-abortion line.
79. At the end of October, egged on by rank-and-file demands for an eight-hour day(sentencedict.com), the Soviet endorsed renewed strike action.
80. For more serious offences, drivers' licences may also endorsed with penalty points.
81. The meeting endorsed unanimously a resolution agreeing to maintain present high levels of production.
82. Three days later the Senate endorsed the Marshall Plan by a vote of sixty-nine to seventeen.
83. So far, he's had his licence endorsed and spent 28 days in a young offenders institution.
84. Franklin Roosevelt, who equated wealth with energy and idealism, heartily endorsed the appointment.
85. Official results showed that 98.7 percent of voters had endorsed the document, and that the turnout had been 97 percent.
86. The assembly endorsed the new prime minister by the slimmest of margins.
87. Mr Gorbachev has endorsed both the plan and the idea of soliciting western aid.
88. In so doing they legitimated and endorsed the statusquo, and fulfilled an ideological function of agent of disguised social control.
89. Francis Place, remembering his days as a journeyman tailor, endorsed this view.
90. The report was unanimously endorsed by delegates at close of congress.
More similar words: endorse, endorsement, vendor, dorsal, candor, horse, worse, worsen, corset, indoors, remorse, horseman, pandora's box, law and order, dark horse, horseback, horseplay, remorseful, supersede, immersed, dispersed, endow, tendon, send out, fend off, endowed, attend on, innuendo, splendour, depend on.