Dictionary entry

Authorize

Webster's Dictionary 1913

Au″thor‐ize (�), v. t. [imp. & p. p.Authorized (�); p. pr. & vb. n.Authorizing.] [OE. autorize, F. autoriser, fr. LL. auctorizare, authorisare. See Author.] 1. To clothe with authority, warrant, or legal power; to give a right to act; to empower; as, to authorize commissioners to settle a boundary.

2. To make legal; to give legal sanction to; to legalize; as, to authorize a marriage.

3. To establish by authority, as by usage or public opinion; to sanction; as, idioms authorized by usage.

4. To sanction or confirm by the authority of some one; to warrant; as, to authorize a report.

A woman's story at a winter's fire,

Authorized by her grandam.

Shak.

5. To justify; to furnish a ground for. Locke.

To authorize one's self, to rely for authority.

Authorizing himself, for the most part, upon other histories.

Sir P. Sidney.