"Undersign" typically refers to the act of signing a document below someone else's signature, indicating agreement or acknowledgement of its contents. It is commonly used in legal contracts and agreements.
The homophone for "meant" is "mint."
Meant is the past tense of mean.
The past tense form of "mean" is "meant."
The past tense is you meant.
The past participle is meant.
I own one of these facsimiles, so if you have one there are at least two. Any idea how much they are worth?
Synonyms are different words with similar or the same meaning. Because autographs are signatures, asking for a person's John Hancock will give you the same results. Here are some synonyms: Endorse, inscribe, sign, subscribe, undersign
No. To undersign simply means that you sign at the bottom of a letter or legal document. To sign for a company you need corporate authority or other legal authority such as a power of attorney. Certain state laws address signatures on corporate documents. For example, the law in Massachusetts regarding a corporate transfer of real property must be executed by the president or a vice president and the treasurer or the assistant treasurer, who may be one and the same person. If the deed is not signed by two officers the corporation must record a vote that gives the authority to a single officer, or some other person, in order for the deed to be valid.
Meant... As in "he was meant to have it."
It depends on WHAT it is meant to be!It depends on WHAT it is meant to be!It depends on WHAT it is meant to be!It depends on WHAT it is meant to be!
There is no homophone for meant
what is meant by demand ?
what is meant by topology?
what is meant by electronics?
what meant Acromatisation
what meant Acromatisation
it is meant by you