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Indue or Endue, to endow, to supply, to furnish: “Mercury i. thee with leasing,” Tw. I, 5, 105. “more strong reasons I shall i. you with,” John IV, 2, 43. “the tribunes i. you with the people's voice,” Cor. II, 3, 147. Partic. --d == endowed, gifted: “men --d with worthy qualities,” Gent. V, 4, 153. “--d with intellectual sense,” Err. II, 1, 22. “he is best --d in the small,” LLL V, 2, 646. “the full-fraught man and best --d,” H5 II, 2, 139. Having to after it, to denote aim and destination: “like a creature native and --d unto that element,” Hml. IV, 7, 180 (supplied with qualities for that element, suited to live in water). “let our finger ache, and it --s our other healthful members even to that sense of pain,” Oth. III, 4, 146 (it imparts to the other limbs the faculty of feeling the same pain).