appoint

Etymology
From, borrowed from (🇨🇬), from ; Latin  +. See point.

Verb

 * 1)  To set, fix or determine (a time or place for something such as a meeting, or the meeting itself) by authority or agreement.
 * 2)  To name (someone to a post or role).
 * 3)  To furnish or equip (a place) completely; to provide with all the equipment or furnishings necessary; to fit out.
 * 4)  To equip (someone) with (something); to assign (someone) authoritatively (some equipment).
 * 5)  To fix the disposition of (property) by designating someone to take use of (it).
 * 6) * 1828–29 (case decided), published in 1843, in the Reports of Cases Decided in the High Court of Chancery:
 * If the donee of a power appoint the fund to one of the objects of the power, under an understanding that the latter is to lend the fund to tho former, although on good security, the appointment is bad.
 * 1)  To fix with power or firmness by decree or command; to ordain or establish.
 * 2)  To resolve; to determine; to ordain.
 * 3) * 1823 December 13, a record quoted in The Christian Library: A Reprint of Popular Religious Works (Richard Watson, Thomas Taylor, Thomas Raffles, etc; 1836):
 * The day being very stormy, we were obliged to keep at home; which I much regretted, as it abridged my opportunity of seeing the Jewish synagogues, as we had appointed to do to-day.
 * 1) * 1828–29 (case decided), published in 1843, in the Reports of Cases Decided in the High Court of Chancery:
 * If the donee of a power appoint the fund to one of the objects of the power, under an understanding that the latter is to lend the fund to tho former, although on good security, the appointment is bad.
 * 1)  To fix with power or firmness by decree or command; to ordain or establish.
 * 2)  To resolve; to determine; to ordain.
 * 3) * 1823 December 13, a record quoted in The Christian Library: A Reprint of Popular Religious Works (Richard Watson, Thomas Taylor, Thomas Raffles, etc; 1836):
 * The day being very stormy, we were obliged to keep at home; which I much regretted, as it abridged my opportunity of seeing the Jewish synagogues, as we had appointed to do to-day.
 * 1) * 1823 December 13, a record quoted in The Christian Library: A Reprint of Popular Religious Works (Richard Watson, Thomas Taylor, Thomas Raffles, etc; 1836):
 * The day being very stormy, we were obliged to keep at home; which I much regretted, as it abridged my opportunity of seeing the Jewish synagogues, as we had appointed to do to-day.
 * The day being very stormy, we were obliged to keep at home; which I much regretted, as it abridged my opportunity of seeing the Jewish synagogues, as we had appointed to do to-day.

Translations

 * Bulgarian: ,
 * Dutch:, ,
 * Finnish:
 * French:, date
 * German: ,
 * Italian: ,
 * Latin: scisco
 * Maori: kopou
 * Polish: ,
 * Russian:
 * Ukrainian: признача́ти


 * Azerbaijani:
 * Bashkir: ҡуйыу
 * Finnish:
 * German:
 * Italian:, , ,
 * Maori: kopou
 * Old English: sċrīfan
 * Russian:,  , присваивать звание
 * Sanskrit:
 * Zazaki: tayin kerden


 * Bulgarian:
 * Finnish: ,
 * German: ,
 * Italian: ,
 * Portuguese:
 * Russian: ,
 * Spanish:


 * Russian: ,


 * Zazaki: eşten


 * Bulgarian:
 * Finnish:
 * French:, ,
 * German: ,
 * Latin: scisco, ,
 * Maori: kopou
 * Portuguese: ,
 * Spanish: ,


 * Bulgarian: ,
 * Czech:
 * Danish: udnævne
 * Dutch:
 * French:, , ,
 * Georgian: დანიშვნა
 * German:, , ,
 * Japanese: 任命する
 * Latin: addīcō, scisco
 * Maori: kopou
 * Norwegian: oppnevne
 * Portuguese:, ,
 * Spanish: ,
 * Swedish: ,
 * Ukrainian: назнача́ти
 * Welsh:

Etymology
Deverbal of. from, from , from ; Latin +.

Noun

 * 1) an amount of small change
 * 2) money which completes a payment, balances an account
 * 3)  complementary support
 * 1)  complementary support