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Looking for synonyms for "guarantee"? Browse alternatives ranked by relevance — sharper word choices for fiction, poetry, and copywriting.
(v)
(intransitive) To make sure or certain of something (usually some future event or condition).
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(n)
(law, countable) A judicial writ authorizing an officer to make a search, seizure, or arrest, or to execute a judgment.
(transitive) To affirm or warrant the correctness or truth of (something); also, to affirm or warrant (the truth of an assertion or statement).
(transitive) To make sure and secure; ensure.
An assurance or guarantee.
(transitive) To take upon oneself; to start, to embark on (a specific task etc.).
(adj)
Free from attack or danger; protected.
Guaranteed; secure.
A person or company that provides a guarantee.
To make a solemn promise (to do something).
Deserved, necessary, appropriate.
(ambitransitive, ditransitive) To commit to (some action or outcome), or to assure (a person) of such commitment; to make an oath or vow.
(ambitransitive) To use offensive, profane, or obscene language.
(ditransitive) To give (permission or wish).
(transitive, catenative) To permit, to give permission to.
(transitive) To attest that a product, service, organization, or person has met an official standard.
A proposal that has been made.
The act of assuring; a declaration intended to inspire full confidence; something designed to give confidence to someone.
(ditransitive) To move, shift, provide something abstract or concrete to someone or something or somewhere.
To make somebody able (to do, or to be, something); to give sufficient ability or power to do or to be; to give strength or ability to.
The granting of a certificate.
(transitive) To assure anew; to restore confidence to; to free from fear or self-doubt.
The feeling of being reassured, of having confidence restored, of having apprehensions dispelled.
To give what is needed or desired, especially basic needs.
(uncountable, recourse to) The use of (someone or something) as a source of help in a difficult situation.
(transitive) To form; to found; to institute; to set up in business.
Certainty.
Security from damage, loss, or penalty.
(countable, uncountable) The aid or support provided by a sponsor; backing or patronage.
Something provided; a provision.
(transitive) To get hold of; to gain possession of, to procure; to acquire, in any way.
(finance) A person to whom a debt is owed.
(transitive, ditransitive) To transport toward somebody/somewhere.
A person or organization that pays all or part of the cost of an event, publication, media program, etc., usually in exchange for advertising.
Alternative spelling of collateralize. [To secure a loan or other contract by using collateral.]
cause, interest or account
(transitive) Specifically, to assume financial responsibility for something, and guarantee it against failure.
An item of goods or supplies, especially food, obtained for future use.
The state of being certain.
(transitive) To carry out successfully; to accomplish.
The act of something being underwritten financially.
An insurer; an underwriter.
To keep up; to preserve; to uphold (a state, condition etc.).
Actions performed to keep some machine or system functioning or in service.
(law, real estate) A legal agreement in which a borrower pledges real property as collateral for a loan used to purchase or refinance that property.
To bind (someone) by pledge or security; to engage.
To keep up, impose or bring into effect something, not necessarily by force.
(transitive) To create.
Promise or agreement to do something in the future, especially:
The condition or feeling of being safe; security; certainty.
To suffer the loss of something by wrongdoing or non-compliance
A means of indemnity against a future occurrence of an uncertain event.
(countable) A command.
(uncountable) A great attention and concern from someone or something; intellectual curiosity.
(transitive) To bring into existence; (sometimes in particular:)
(transitive) To continue in (a course or mode of action); to not intermit or fall from; to uphold or maintain.
Something serving as an expression of something else.
(transitive) To help keep from falling.
(ambitransitive) To keep safe; to defend; to guard; to prevent harm coming to.
The process of keeping (something or someone) safe.
Synonym of protection.
Something that serves as a guard or protection; a defense.
Complying with justice, correctness, or reason; correct, just, true. See also the interjection senses below.
(finance) Relating to a collateral in the sense of an obligation or security.
Someone who guards, watches over, or protects.
To keep erect; to support; to sustain; to keep from falling
(uncountable) The condition of not being threatened, especially physically, psychologically, emotionally, or financially.
To bring or transport something to its destination.
(journalism) The amount and type of attention given to an event or topic in news media or other media.
A default arrangement that holds if all else fails.
(finance) The yield or profit; the selling price minus the cost of production.
(transitive) To serve as a basis of; form the foundation of.
The act by which something is bonded or joined together.
Synonym of cyborg.
A defense or safeguard.
That which is undertaken; any business, work, or project which a person engages in, or attempts to perform; an enterprise.
(television) Initialism of All My Children: an American television soap opera broadcast from 1970 to 2013.
(transitive) To give as security on a loan of money; especially, to deposit (something) at a pawn shop.
(informal) Something that is very easy to do.
(banking) Money placed in a bank account, as for safekeeping or to earn interest.
(finance) Contract or arrangement reducing one's exposure to risk (for example the risk of price movements or interest rate movements).
To protect; to keep from harm or injury.
A surname from French.
Synonym of reassuring.