WordDisk
  • Reading
    • Shortcuts
      •   Home
      •   All Articles
      •   Read from Another Site
      Sources
      • Wikipedia
      • Simple Wikipedia
      • VOA Learning English
      • Futurity
      • The Conversation
      • MIT News
      • Harvard Gazette
      • Cambridge News
      • YDS/YÖKDİL Passages
      Topics
      • Technology
      • Engineering
      • Business
      • Economics
      • Human
      • Health
      • Energy
      • Biology
      • Nature
      • Space
  •  Log in
  •  Sign up
5.0
History
Add

provided conjunction [ prəˈvʌɪdɪd ]

• on the condition or understanding that.
• "cutting corners was acceptable, provided that you could get away with it"
Similar: if, on condition that, providing (that), provided that, presuming (that), assuming (that), on the assumption that, as long as, given (that), with/on the understanding that, if and only if, contingent on, in the event that, allowing that,

provide verb

• make available for use; supply.
• "these clubs provide a much appreciated service for this area"
Similar: supply, give, issue, furnish, lay out, come up with, dispense, bestow, impart, produce, yield, bring forth, bear, deliver, donate, contribute, pledge, advance, spare, part with, allocate, distribute, allot, assign, put forward, put up, proffer, present, extend, render, fork out, ante up, pony up,
Opposite: refuse, withhold,
• make adequate preparation for (a possible event).
• "new qualifications must provide for changes in technology"
Similar: prepare, allow, make provision, make preparations, be prepared, anticipate, arrange, make arrangements, get ready, plan, make plans, cater,
• stipulate in a will or other legal document.
• "the order should be varied to provide that there would be no contact with the father"
Similar: stipulate, lay down, have as a condition, make it a condition, require, order, ordain, demand, prescribe, state, set out, specify,
• appoint an incumbent to (a benefice).
Origin: late Middle English (also in the sense ‘prepare to do, get ready’): from Latin providere ‘foresee, attend to’, from pro- ‘before’ + videre ‘to see’.


2025 WordDisk