be behind; approve of; "He plumped for the Labor Party"; "I backed Kennedy in 1960"
To give one's name or support to; to sanction; to aid by approval; to approve; as, to indorse an opinion
To write one's name, alone or with other words, upon the back of (a paper), for the purpose of transferring it, or to secure the payment of a note, draft, or the like; to guarantee the payment, fulfillment, performance, or validity of, or to certify something upon the back of (a check, draft, writ, warrant of arrest, etc
To sign the back of a check made out to you so that you can get the check amount in cash The simplest endorsement is to sign your name exactly as it appears on the "payee" line If instead of getting cash, you want to give the check to someone else, you can endorse it with the note: "Pay to the order of (the other person's name) "
One of the diminutives of the pale, being one-eighth the breadth of that ordinary The endorse is used only in pairs - one on each side of the pale This subordinary, like the pallet, was unknown in ancient heraldry
When you endorse a cheque, you write your name on the back of it so that it can be paid into someone's bank account. The payee of the cheque must endorse the cheque
>> The act of a payee or holder of a note, bill, check or other negotiable instrument, of assigning and transferring said instrument to another by signing the back of the instrument, with or without qualifications
If someone's driving licence is endorsed, an official record is made on it that they have been found guilty of a driving offence. For failing to report the accident, his licence was endorsed He also had his licence endorsed with eight penalty points