ESTABLISH vs FOUND: NOUN
- N/A
- Food and lodging, board.
- Food and lodging provided in addition to money
- Preterit and past participle of find.
- A thin, single-cut file for combmakers.
- The operation of casting metal, etc.; the melting of metal or of the materials for glass, etc.
- A three-sided, single-cut file, used in making combs.
ESTABLISH vs FOUND: ADJECTIVE
- N/A
- Equipped; supplied
- Come upon unexpectedly or after searching
ESTABLISH vs FOUND: VERB
- Set up or lay the groundwork for
- Bring about
- Institute, enact, or establish
- Build or establish something abstract
- Establish the validity of something, as by an example, explanation or experiment
- Place
- Set up or found
- To prove and cause to be accepted as true; to establish a fact; to demonstrate.
- To form; to found; to institute; to set up in business.
- To make stable or firm; to confirm.
- Use as a basis for; found on
- Use as a basis for; found on
- Set up or found
- Set up or lay the groundwork for
- Simple past tense and past participle of find.
- To melt, especially of metal in an industrial setting.
- To start some type of organization or company.
- To begin building.
ESTABLISH vs FOUND: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To place or settle in a secure position or condition.
- To cause to become regular or usual.
- To cause to be able to grow or thrive.
- To bring about; generate or effect.
- To cause to be recognized and accepted.
- To introduce and put (a law, for example) into force.
- To prove the validity or truth of.
- To make a state institution of (a church).
- To cause (an institution, for example) to come into existence or begin operating; found; set up.
- To make stable or firm; to fix immovably or firmly; to set (a thing) in a place and make it stable there; to settle; to confirm.
- To originate and secure the permanent existence of; to found; to institute; to create and regulate; -- said of a colony, a state, or other institutions.
- To secure public recognition in favor of; to prove and cause to be accepted as true
- To set up in business; to place advantageously in a fixed condition; -- used reflexively
- To appoint or constitute for permanence, as officers, laws, regulations, etc.; to enact; to ordain.
- To take the ffirst steps or measures in erecting or building up; to furnish the materials for beginning; to begin to raise; to originate
- To form by melting a metal, and pouring it into a mold; to cast.
- To lay the basis of; to set, or place, as on something solid, for support; to ground; to establish upon a basis, literal or figurative; to fix firmly.
- To establish the foundation or basis of; base.
- To establish or set up, especially with provision for continuing existence: : establish.
- To make (objects) by pouring molten material into a mold.
- To melt (metal) and pour into a mold.
ESTABLISH vs FOUND: OTHER WORD TYPES
- In systematic biol., to give technical publication to; fix by publication in the nomenclatorial sense. See publication, 5.
- To make stable, firm, or sure; appoint; ordain; settle or fix unalterably.
- To put or fix on a firm basis; settle stably or fixedly; put in a settled or an efficient state or condition; inceptively, set up or found: as, his health is well established; an established reputation; to establish a person in business; to establish a colony or a university.
- To confirm or strengthen; make more stable or determinate.
- To confirm by affirmation or approval; sanction; uphold.
- To make good; prove; substantiate; show to be valid or well grounded; cause to be recognized as valid or legal; cause to be accepted as true or as worthy of credence; as, to establish one's claim or one's case; to establish a marriage or a theory.
- To fix or settle permanently, or as if permanently: with a reflexive pronoun.
- To settle, as property.
- Use as a basis for
- Found on
- To east; form into shape by casting in a mold, as metal or a metallic article.
- To lay the basis of; fix, set, or place, as on something solid; ground; base; establish on a basis, physical or moral.
- To take the first steps or measures in erecting or building up; begin to raise; make a beginning of; originate by active means: as, to found a city or an empire.
- To make provision for the establishment of; originate by gift, grant, or endowment: as, to found an institution or a professorship by bequest.
- To base one's opinion; rely: followed by on or upon: as, I found upon the evidence of my senses.
- Found on
- To hasten; go (to get or seek something); strive.
- A dialectal variant of fond, fand.
- Imp. & p. p. of find.
- Use as a basis for
ESTABLISH vs FOUND: RELATED WORDS
- Base, Set up, Show, Ground, Constitute, Institute, Found, Launch, Give, Instal, Install, Demonstrate, Make, Prove, Build
- Revealed, Discovering, Showed, Unearthed, Uncovered, Discovered, Set up, Base, Ground, Plant, Launch, Institute, Constitute, Establish, Recovered
ESTABLISH vs FOUND: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Shew, Base, Set up, Show, Ground, Institute, Found, Launch, Give, Instal, Install, Demonstrate, Make, Prove, Build
- Identified, Retrieved, Revealed, Discovering, Unearthed, Uncovered, Set up, Discovered, Base, Ground, Plant, Launch, Institute, Establish, Recovered
ESTABLISH vs FOUND: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Episcopalians to establish a hierarchy in the Colonies.
- Establish and enforce a requirement of joint escalation.
- By providing an expired passport, you establish both.
- Yes, there are many reasons to establish paternity.
- Why should parents establish paternity at the hospital?
- Denali bylaws that establish the Capital Stock Committee.
- Establish a legacy of environmental and social responsibility.
- NAES performs all required studies to establish compliance.
- To establish graduate schools and curricular programs, and to establish admission and disciplinary policies.
- State does not establish such areas, the Secretary may establish rating areas for that State.
- The officer searched the backpack and found marijuana, then arrested defendant and found marijuana cigarettes in his pockets.
- As a bonus, this book details many of the popular ornamental trees found in Europe, in addition to those found in the wild.
- If a record is not found, a certified No record found letter will be issued.
- Later that day, Missy was found strangled and five days after that, Eddie was also found dead.
- Results Enterovirus was the most commonly found virus in the symptomatic population, whereas parechovirus, astrovirus, and sapovirus were rarely found.
- Yoshi hat See all the peach stuff we found Speaking of video games, we also found an Animal Crossing Backpack!
- Also not found on the AP test but found in this unit is the surface area of a curved plane.
- They went in and found defendant passed out and found items associated with meth manufacture.
- LOST AND FOUND All items found are to be brought to the Main Office.
- Charles was found alive, not far from where Miller found his son.
ESTABLISH vs FOUND: QUESTIONS
- How to establish the correct soundproofing solution?
- How to establish parentage by voluntary acknowledgment?
- Will Israel and Kosovo establish diplomatic relations?
- Can self-consciousness establish a liberum arbitrium?
- Why do local governments establish zoning ordinances?
- Why establish the Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge?
- Why America should establish mandatory national service?
- When can service providers establish economic nexus?
- How do you establish analytical method equivalency?
- Can preferred stocks establish contractual obligations?
- Where are chlorophyll pigments found in thylakoid membranes?
- Which biomolecules found in living things contain phosphorus?
- Where are volcanoes found at divergent plate boundaries?
- Where is heterochromatin found in eukaryotic cells?
- Where are agglutinated species of foraminifera found?
- Where is Minamata disease (methylmercury poisoning) found?
- Where are gluconeogenic enzymes found in mitochondria?
- Where are extragenital lesions most commonly found?
- Where are conservative Democrats most commonly found?
- Where was helium found before it was found on Earth?