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endowment
/ ɪnˈdaʊmənt /
noun
- the source of income with which an institution, etc, is endowed
- the income itself
- the act or process of endowing
- usually plural natural talents or qualities
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Other Words From
- nonen·dowment noun
- reen·dowment noun
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Word History and Origins
Origin of endowment1
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Example Sentences
The schools endowment grew from $114 million to $472 million.
The National Endowment for the Arts reports that more than half of all Americans are still reading—and even talking about books.
Brock-Broido has been honored with two National Endowment of the Arts fellowships and a Guggenheim fellowship.
He has received fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts.
The fund would then disburse the money based on a formula, providing regular payments until the endowment is exhausted.
But for the most part even industry and endowment were powerless against the inertia of custom and the dead-weight of environment.
She was a woman of great intellectual endowment, with highly cultivated literary tastes.
This endowment would give the schools consequence and character, and would correct and elevate the standard of education.
At its endowment Henry laid on the altar the famous "cornu eburneum," now lost.
That we have groped for the way of right conduct and agonized over the soul betokens our spiritual endowment.
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