Endorse in a sentence as a verb

People will tailor their comments to please the endorsers that be.

I would even go further and give endorser rights to the OP on a Ask/Show HN post.

What, so do I suck at Programming Languages because I haven't trolled my 25 closest acquaintances for endorsements?

They continually endorse toxic financial instruments that make the fat cats in the banks some of the richest people in the world in return for what?

If you endorse that you can find yourself inculcating in them an unhealthy externally generated view of self worth.

I endorse the talk wholeheartedly but for reasons even I don't understand my name is first on the title slide and I don't want to claim any undue credit.

Unless there really is a significant difference between the views of users with > 1000 karma and the rest, the "endorse" button is not fundamentally different from an upvote, is it?

For threads that have fallen off the frontpage, drop the required number of endorsements to 1 and let the parent commenter have the option to endorse the child comment regardless of the parent poster's karma.

You can't knowingly endorse toxic financial instruments in one breath causing huge financial instability in financial markets all around the world and expect me to believe anything you have to say after that.

If not, commenting on a several-day-old thread will guarantee that you can never post another comment, since once threads drop off the front page it's not likely that many 1000+ karma users will even see those comments, never mind endorse them.

More specifically, around 95% of active climate researchers actively publishing climate papers endorse the consensus position.

I am not a conservative, but the first paragraph really turned me off to reading the remainder of this article by asserting that "conservatives and chauvinists" tend to endorse the notion that there is an under-representation of women in management because "they are not capable.

Supporters of both political parties endorse, or at least tolerate, all manner of government punishment without so much as the pretense of a trial, based solely on government accusation: imprisonment for life, renditions to other countries, even assassinations of their fellow citizens.

Real progress from the Supreme Court probably requires a new justice; the current pattern indicates that pragmatic Democratic appointee is much more likely to abolish software patents and a movement Republican appointee is most likely to definitively endorse them, but individual justices can always assert their own visions once appointed.

Endorse definitions

verb

be behind; approve of; "He plumped for the Labor Party"; "I backed Kennedy in 1960"

See also: back indorse support

verb

give support or one's approval to; "I'll second that motion"; "I can't back this plan"; "endorse a new project"

See also: second back indorse

verb

guarantee as meeting a certain standard; "certified grade AAA meat"

See also: certify indorse

verb

sign as evidence of legal transfer; "endorse cheques"

See also: indorse