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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
insure
verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
also
▪ We will also insure you in the same way following an accident involving any trailer while attached to your motor cycle.
▪ If you wish, you can also insure your Spouse and pay a joint premium starting from £7.90.
▪ We will also insure you against an accident involving any trailer that is attached to your car.
▪ You can also insure your payments in case you're unable to work due to sickness, accident or redundancy.
▪ More than 120,000 disabled motorists are also insured with the firm.
■ NOUN
car
▪ However, while your policy is suspended we will still insure your car against loss or damage by fire or theft.
company
▪ Read in studio Britain's churches are under siege, according to the company which insures them.
▪ The destroyed truck is owned by the volunteer fire company and insured through the county, officials said.
▪ None of the companies will insure ejido property unless it has been properly privatized.
▪ However, the insurance company is balking at insuring against Cigar this year.
insurance
▪ So you are better insuring these expensive possessions on your home insurance.
▪ Mechanics were needed to keep them running, gas stations to fuel them, insurance agents to insure themthe list is endless.
liability
▪ It is fully insured to meet potential liabilities.
▪ If you are unconcerned about business debts and can insure against liability, you may not need a corporation.
▪ General Exceptions Your policy does not insure 1 any liability, injury, loss or damage arising outside the United Kingdom.
loss
▪ However, while your policy is suspended we will still insure your car against loss or damage by fire or theft.
▪ The availability crisis developed after the January 1994 Northridge earthquake, which inflicted more than $ 8 billion in insured residential losses.
policy
▪ General Exceptions Your policy does not insure 1 any liability, injury, loss or damage arising outside the United Kingdom.
▪ Expensive items of jewellery may be insured under an All Risks policy.
risk
▪ Therefore the landlord should be encouraged to insure against all normal risks.
▪ But for growers, it can be an expensive way of insuring against risk, suggests Mr Dickie.
▪ In the end, it is possible, technically, to insure against any risk.
▪ What Mr Hemsley needs, suggests Mr Dickie, is a way of insuring his returns against risk.
sum
▪ At this renewal of your Policy, you may increase your Contents and Buildings sums insured free of charge.
▪ In the event of the total loss of one of these separately insured items the proper settlement is the sum insured.
▪ The limit payable under this section is restricted to a maximum of 10% of the Buildings sum insured.
▪ If you would like to increase your sums insured, please use the attached coupon.
▪ Members choose what they wish to insure and decide for themselves on the sums they insure.
▪ The normal premium is about 10 percent of the total sum insured.
▪ This shows both the increase due to index-linking and, if applicable, an increase where your sum insured was previously under £17,500.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
the insured
▪ The insured is required to pay a portion of all medical bills.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ No one will insure him because of his heart condition.
▪ We insured all our valuables before the move.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Insure

Insure \In*sure"\, v. i. To underwrite; to make insurance; as, a company insures at three per cent.

Insure

Insure \In"sure\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Insured; p. pr. & vb. n. Insuring.] [OE. ensuren, prob. for assuren, by a change of prefix. See 1st In-, and Sure, and cf. Assure, Ensure.] [Written also ensure.]

  1. To make sure or secure; as, to insure safety to any one.

  2. Specifically, to secure against a loss by a contingent event, on certain stipulated conditions, or at a given rate or premium; to give or to take an insurance on or for; as, a merchant insures his ship or its cargo, or both, against the dangers of the sea; goods and buildings are insured against fire or water; persons are insured against sickness, accident, or death; and sometimes hazardous debts are insured.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
insure

mid-15c., insuren, spelling variant of ensuren (see ensure). Took on its particular sense of "make safe against loss by payment of premiums" from mid-17c. (replacing assure in that meaning). Related: Insured; insuring.

Wiktionary
insure

vb. 1 (context transitive English) To provide for compensation if some specified risk occurs. Often agreed by policy (contract) to offer financial compensation in case of an accident, theft or other undesirable event. 2 (context intransitive English) To deal in such contracts; subscribe to a policy of insurance 3 (context chiefly US English) (alternative spelling of ensure nodot=1 English): (context transitive English) To make sure or certain of; guarantee.

WordNet
insure
  1. v. be careful or certain to do something; make certain of something; "He verified that the valves were closed"; "See that the curtains are closed"; "control the quality of the product" [syn: see, check, see to it, ensure, control, ascertain, assure]

  2. make certain of; "This nest egg will ensure a nice retirement for us"; "Preparation will guarantee success!" [syn: guarantee, ensure, assure, secure]

  3. protect by insurance; "The insurance won't cover this" [syn: cover, underwrite]

  4. take out insurance for

Wikipedia

Usage examples of "insure".

When Jefferson asked Adams to inquire about insuring the life of the sculptor Houdon, who was sailing for America to do the statue of Washington, discussion of the matter went back and forth in several letters before Adams had things arranged.

One or two bottles of this nervine and tonic used previous to confinement, will, in many cases, save hours of terrible suffering, besides regulating the system, and thus insuring a speedy recovery.

The value of an agent which thus improves the general health, insures immunity from coughs, colds, and other diseases, and at the same time produces a healthy and permanent beauty of complexion, is at once apparent.

This not only insures a smooth, melodious flow, but enables the composer to heighten the effect of any situation by choosing consonants that harmonize with it.

The last and most important step to be taken by the Government, to insure Unionism in the Border States, is to emancipate the slaves of disloyalists in Kentucky and Tennessee.

Then, too, he proceeds on the theory that a yearly supply of one foot of water is necessary, whereas half that amount during the dryest year, supplied through the five growing months, would insure good crops.

The wet cloth could be lowered into the dyebath by hand, but once there a spoon or paddle would be needed to swish the cloth about and insure the color was absorbed evenly.

It will insure an active functioning, and make you feel and be thoroughly alive.

Moreover, whenever complicated experiments are in progress, so careful an observer as Gartner would have castrated his hybrids, and this would have insured in each generation a cross with the pollen from a distinct flower, either from the same plant or from another plant of the same hybrid nature.

After opening the abscess with a sharp blade, causing a spontaneous flow of pus, I had pushed in the tip of a hemostat clamp to insure good drainage.

The nearer watchdog would have virtually no chance of surviving any attack from Lassa, but her very destruction would insure a warning for the defenders of Cimmaron.

A phymech absorbed one half pint of liquified radiol every three years, and an occasional lubrication, to insure proper functioning.

Sapor, who encompassed the camp with superior numbers, patiently waited till the increasing rage of famine and pestilence had insured his victory.

Would it not be better to permit the Princesses to live until they fulfilled their quests, thus insuring that all three talismans passed into his own hands?

The Rebels cut them down to a man, then swept the bodies with more fire to insure there would be no more surprises from that bunch of outlaws.