to put (money) to use, by purchase or expenditure, in something offering potential profitable returns, as interest, income, or appreciation in value.
to use (money), as in accumulating something: to invest large sums in books.
to use, give, or devote (time, talent, etc.), as for a purpose or to achieve something: He invested a lot of time in cleaning up the neighborhood after the flood.
to furnish with power, authority, rank, etc.: The Constitution invests the president with the power of veto.
to furnish or endow with a power, right, etc.; vest: Feudalism invested the lords with absolute authority over their vassals.
to endow with a quality or characteristic: to invest a friend with every virtue.
to infuse or belong to, as a quality or characteristic: Goodness invests his every action.
Metallurgy. to surround (a pattern) with an investment.
to provide with the insignia of office.
to install in an office or position.
to clothe, attire, or dress.
to cover, adorn, or envelop: Spring invests the trees with leaves.
to surround (a place) with military forces or works so as to prevent approach or escape; besiege.
verb (used without object)
to invest money; make an investment: to invest in oil stock.
Origin of invest
First recorded in 1525–35; from Old Italian investire, from Medieval Latin investīre “to install, invest (money), surround, clothe in,” Latin: “to clothe, deck, adorn,” equivalent to in- prefix + vestīre “to clothe, dress,” derivative of vestis “clothes, garment”; see in-2, vest
OTHER WORDS FROM invest
in·ves·tor,nounnon·in·ves·tor,nouno·ver·in·vest,verbpre·in·vest,verb (used with object)
re·in·vest,verb (used with object)un·der·in·vest,verb (used without object)un·der·in·vest·ed,adjectiveun·in·vest·ed,adjectivewell-in·vest·ed,adjective
WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH invest
infect, infest, invest
Words nearby invest
invertible counterpoint, invertin, invertor, invert soap, invert sugar, invest, investable, investigable, investigate, investigation, investigative new drug
The idea to invest in their own hair company came from Miko after seeing how clients at their salon responded to her natural hair.
Goodbye To A Natural Hair Guru: Miss Jessie's Cofounder Titi Branch Dead At 45|Danielle Belton|December 16, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Others are here to invest in artists with promising reputations, and thus the possibility of future ROI.
Sneer and Clothing in Miami: Inside The $3 Billion Woodstock of Contemporary Art|Jay Michaelson|December 6, 2014|DAILY BEAST
We should invest in new leaders, new conversations and new collaborations.
The Hidden Link Between Women and War|Leith Greenslade|December 3, 2014|DAILY BEAST
I want to invest in the future and the Republicans are stuck in the past.
The Only Way for Democrats to Win|Jonathan Alter|October 24, 2014|DAILY BEAST
“San Miguel is a very small place and when someone shows up to invest lots of money, everyone hears about it,” he said.
Trading Dime Bags for Salvador Dali|Jason McGahan|October 19, 2014|DAILY BEAST
We will have Eastern visitors here by the thousands—capitalists—men with money to invest.
The Octopus|Frank Norris
But would this work advance the cause of forgery, and tend to invest it with the quality of truth?
Notes and Queries, Number 212, November 19, 1853|Various
He was planning on winding up somewhere important and to do it he had to invest his years properly.
Measure for a Loner|James Judson Harmon
I push on the end of the hog's bristle, which continues to invest the polype.
Country Walks of a Naturalist with His Children|W. Houghton
Take a bank with one hundred thousand dollars to invest in government bonds as a basis for its issuance of currency.
Belford's Magazine, Volume II, No. 8, January, 1889|Various
British Dictionary definitions for invest
invest
/ (ɪnˈvɛst) /
verb
(often foll by in)to lay out (money or capital in an enterprise, esp by purchasing shares) with the expectation of profit
(tr often foll by in) to devote (effort, resources, etc, to a project)
(tr; often foll by in or with)mainlyarchaicto clothe or adorn (in some garment, esp the robes of an office)to invest a king in the insignia of an emperor
(tr often foll by in) to install formally or ceremoniously (in an official position, rank, etc)
(tr; foll by in or with)to place (power, authority, etc, in) or provide (with power or authority)to invest new rights in the monarchy
(tr; usually passive; foll by in or with)to provide or endow (a person with qualities, characteristics, etc)he was invested with great common sense
(tr foll by with) usuallypoeticto cover or adorn, as if with a coat or garmentwhen spring invests the trees with leaves
(tr)rareto surround with military forces; besiege
(intr foll by in) informalto purchase; buy
Derived forms of invest
investableorinvestible, adjectiveinvestor, noun
Word Origin for invest
C16: from Medieval Latin investīre to clothe, from Latin, from vestīre, from vestis a garment