: to train (an animal) to adjust to the service or convenience of humans equipment used to break horses a halter-broke horse (2) : inure, accustom d : to exhaust in health, strength, or capacity broken by his struggle for power 7 a : to stop or bring to an end suddenl...
: to train (an animal) to adjust to the service or convenience of humans equipment used to break horses a halter-broke horse (2) : inure, accustom d : to exhaust in health, strength, or capacity broken by his struggle for power 7 a : to stop or bring to an end suddenl...
Logic.the antecedent of a conditional proposition. verb (used with object) to put in a fit or proper state. to accustom or inure: to condition oneself to the cold. to air-condition. to form or be a condition of; determine, limit, or restrict as a condition. ...
--Shak. 2. To fit for any use by time or habit; to habituate; to accustom; to inure; to ripen; to mature; as, to season one to a climate. 3. Hence, to prepare by drying or hardening, or removal of natural juices; as, to season timber. 4. To fit for taste; to render ...
transitive verb(Law)To insure; to covenant to indemnify for loss, or to pay a specified sum at death. SeeInsure. fromWiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. verbtransitiveTo make sure andsecure. verbtransitiveTo give (someone)confidencein thetrustworthinessof (something). ...
As much as I like the college world, it has done a huge disservice to many people because it has allowed them to remainimmatureand irresponsible for longer than people of my parents 'or grandparents' generation. Texas Lawmaker Proposes Guns On CampusDave Hurteau 2008 ...
Synonyms:inure,familiarize Archaic.to practice habitually or customarily; make a practice of. verb (used without object) used,using. to be accustomed or customarily found (used with an infinitive expressed or understood, and, except in archaic use, now only in the past): ...
: to train (an animal) to adjust to the service or convenience of humans equipment used to break horses a halter-broke horse (2) : inure, accustom d : to exhaust in health, strength, or capacity broken by his struggle for power 7 a : to stop or bring to an end suddenl...
,Old English Law. a stolen article found on the person of or near the thief: to be taken with the mainour. Discover More Word History and Origins Origin ofmainour1 1225–75;Middle English<Anglo-Frenchmainoure(Old Frenchmanoeuvrehand labor);maneuver,inure ...
: to train (an animal) to adjust to the service or convenience of humans equipment used to break horses a halter-broke horse (2) : inure, accustom d : to exhaust in health, strength, or capacity broken by his struggle for power 7 a : to stop or bring to an end suddenl...