en·due (ĕn-d, -dy) also in·due (ĭn-)
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Tweet tr.v. en·dued, en·du·ing, en·dues also in·dued or in·du·ing or in·dues 1. To provide with a quality or trait; endow: "A being whom I myself had formed, and endued with life, had met me at midnight among the precipices of an inaccesible mountain" (Mary Shelley). 2. To put on (a piece of clothing). [Middle English enduen, from Old French enduire, to lead in, induct (influenced by Middle English endowen, to endow), from Latin indūcere; see INDUCE. Sense 2, Middle English induen, to clothe, from Latin induere, to put on; see eu- in the Appendix of Indo-European roots.] |
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