Definition
An archaic or obsolete form meaning to endorse or approve.
Etymology
From Old French 'endosser,' from Latin 'dorsum' (back). The word originally meant to write on the back of a document, which evolved into the meaning of approving or supporting something.
Kelly Says
The word 'endore' is frozen in time—it's what people used centuries ago before we settled on 'endorse,' showing how language naturally trims down variant forms as speakers reach consensus.
Translations
CACatalà
endore
en-do-reh
CSČeština
endore
en-do-reh
DEDeutsch
Endore
en-DOR-eh
ELΕλληνικά
εντόρε
en-to-reh
ESEspañol
endorre
en-DOR-reh
HIहिन्दी
एंडोरे
en-do-reh
HUMagyar
endore
en-do-reh
IDBahasa Indonesia
endore
en-do-reh
ITItaliano
endore
en-DO-reh
MSBahasa Melayu
endore
en-do-reh
MYမြန်မာ
အင်းဒိုး
an-do-e
NLNederlands
endore
en-do-reh
PLPolski
endore
en-do-reh
PTPortuguês
endore
en-DO-reh
RORomână
endore
en-do-reh
RUРусский
эндоре
en-do-reh
SVSvenska
endore
en-do-reh
SWKiswahili
endore
en-do-reh
TAதமிழ்
எண்டோரே
en-do-reh
TEతెలుగు
ఎండోరే
en-do-reh
TRTürkçe
endore
en-do-reh
UKУкраїнська
ендоре
en-do-reh
VITiếng Việt
endore
en-do-reh