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AID
1[eyd]
noun
the division of the United States International Development Cooperation Agency that coordinates the various foreign aid programs with U.S. foreign policy: established in 1961.
AID
2abbreviation
American Institute of Decorators.
American Institute of Interior Designers.
British., artificial insemination donor. Also A.I.D.
aid
3[eyd]
verb (used with object)
to provide support for or relief to; help.
to aid the victims of the fire.
to promote the progress or accomplishment of; facilitate.
verb (used without object)
to give help or assistance.
noun
help or support; assistance.
a person or thing that aids or furnishes assistance; helper; auxiliary.
Manège., aids,
Also called natural aids. the means by which a rider communicates with and controls a horse, as the hands, legs, voice, and shifts in weight.
Also called artificial aids. the devices used by a rider to increase control of a horse, as spurs, whip, and martingale.
a payment made by feudal vassals to their lord on special occasions.
English History., (after 1066) any of several revenues received by a king in the Middle Ages from his vassals and other subjects, limited by the Magna Charta to specified occasions.
aid
1/ eɪd /
verb
to give support to (someone to do something); help or assist
(tr) to assist financially
noun
assistance; help; support
a person, device, etc, that helps or assists
a teaching aid
Also: artificial aid. mountaineering any of various devices such as piton or nut when used as a direct help in the ascent
(in medieval Europe; in England after 1066) a feudal payment made to the king or any lord by his vassals, usually on certain occasions such as the marriage of a daughter or the knighting of an eldest son
informal, in support of; for the purpose of
AID
2abbreviation
acute infectious disease
artificial insemination (by) donor: former name for Donor Insemination (DI)
Aid
3combining form
denoting a charitable organization or function that raises money for a cause
Band Aid
Ferryaid
Confusables Note
Other Word Forms
- aider noun
- aidful adjective
- aidless adjective
- unaided adjective
- unaidedly adverb
- unaiding adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of aid1
Origin of aid2
Word History and Origins
Origin of aid1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Perez vowed "the biggest deportation plan in Spain's recent history" targeted at immigrants who commit crimes and financed by freezing all foreign aid.
Israel has released the five remaining Spanish detainees from flotillas it blocked while they were carrying aid and pro-Palestinian activists to devastated Gaza, sources at Spain's foreign ministry said on Sunday.
As anxious but relieved Israeli families counted down the hours until their loved ones' return, desperate Palestinians picked through the ruins of their homes in Gaza City and aid trucks queued to deliver badly needed supplies.
The third day of the ceasefire saw some aid trucks cross into Gaza, but residents in Khan Yunis, in the south of the Strip, said some shipments were being ransacked by starving residents in chaotic scenes.
"We don't want to live in a jungle. We demand aid be secured and respectfully distributed," said Mohammed Zarab.
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