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Definition of found verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

found

verb
 
/faʊnd/
 
/faʊnd/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they found
 
/faʊnd/
 
/faʊnd/
he / she / it founds
 
/faʊndz/
 
/faʊndz/
past simple founded
 
/ˈfaʊndɪd/
 
/ˈfaʊndɪd/
past participle founded
 
/ˈfaʊndɪd/
 
/ˈfaʊndɪd/
-ing form founding
 
/ˈfaʊndɪŋ/
 
/ˈfaʊndɪŋ/
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  1. found something to start something, such as an organization or an institution, especially by providing money synonym establish
    • to found a club/company/school
    • Her family founded the college in 1895.
    • the founding members of the European Union
    • He was a founding editor of the journal.
    Extra Examples
    • He founded a new religion.
    • She founded the company 20 years ago.
    Topics Historyb2
  2. found something to be the first to start building and living in a town or country
    • The town was founded by English settlers in 1790.
    • French settlers founded New Orleans.
    • the founding generation of immigrants
    Topics Historyb2
  3. [usually passive] to base something on something
    • be founded on something Their marriage was founded on love and mutual respect.
    see also ill-founded, unfounded, well founded
  4. found something (specialist) to melt metal and pour it into a mould; to make objects using this process
  5. past tense, past participle of find
  6. Word Originsenses 1 to 3 Middle English: from Old French fonder, from Latin fundare, from fundus ‘bottom, base’. sense 4 early 16th cent.: from French fondre, from Latin fundere ‘melt, pour’.
See found in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee found in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
given
adjective
 
 
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