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Answer for the clue "Recipient of a foundation award ", 7 letters:
grantee

Alternative clues for the word grantee

Word definitions for grantee in dictionaries

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
grantee \gran*tee"\ (gr[.a]n*t[=e]"), n. (Law) The person to whom a grant or conveyance is made. His grace will not survive the poor grantee he despises. --Burke.

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. a recipient of a grant

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
late 15c., from grant (n.) + -ee .

Usage examples of grantee.

In the interim, however, it seems that for reasons purely their own, the grantees saw fit to sub-let their contract, not once but twice.

All property, public or private, was to be seized, a portion of it given to the grantees of the land, and the rest sold on account of the king.

For although there is no difference in principle between a devise of a piece of land by will and a conveyance of it by deed, the dramatic resemblance of a devisee to an heir is stronger than that of a grantee.

The consequence will be that these purchasers, or rather grantees, will pay, not only from the rents as they accrue, which might as well be received by the state, but from the spoil of the materials of buildings, from waste in woods, and from whatever money, by hands habituated to the gripings of usury, they can wring from the miserable peasant.

Heres, as Beseler /1/ and others have remarked, from meaning a successor to the property of a person deceased, was extended to the donee mortis causa, and even more broadly to grantees in general.

Conversely as to the benefit of warranties made to a deceased grantee, his heir was the only person interested to enforce such warranties, because the land descended to him.

If that had been the notion, there would have been a contract directly binding the first grantor to the assign, as soon as the land was sold, and thus there would have been two warranties arising from the same clause,--one to the first grantee, a second to the assign.