| 1. | to found, institute, build, or bring into being on a firm or stable basis: to establish a university; to establish a medical practice. |
| 2. | to install or settle in a position, place, business, etc.: to establish one's child in business. |
| 3. | to show to be valid or true; prove: to establish the facts of the matter. |
| 4. | to cause to be accepted or recognized: to establish a custom; She established herself as a leading surgeon. |
| 5. | to bring about permanently: to establish order. |
| 6. | to enact, appoint, or ordain for permanence, as a law; fix unalterably. |
| 7. | to make (a church) a national or state institution. |
| 8. | Cards. to obtain control of (a suit) so that one can win all the subsequent tricks in it. |
es·tab·lish (ĭ-stāb'lĭsh) tr.v. es·tab·lished, es·tab·lish·ing, es·tab·lish·es
[Middle English establishen, from Old French establir, establiss-, from Latin stabilīre, from stabilis, firm; see stā- in Indo-European roots.] es·tab'lish·er n. |