affix+a+date+to
1affix a date to — index date Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
2date — I noun assigned time, day, day of the week, dies, marked time, moment, particular point of time, period, period of time, point of time, specified period of time, tempus, time, time during which anything occurs associated concepts: antedating,… …
3date — [n1] point in time; particular day or time age, century, course, day, duration, epoch, era, generation, hour, juncture, moment, period, quarter, reign, span, spell, stage, term, time, while, year; concepts 800,801,802,815 date [n2] social… …
4date — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. day, time, moment; age, era, epoch; informal, rendezvous, tryst; escort, suitor, steady, blind date. v. place [in time], begin, start; outmode, age; informal, court, escort, take out, show the town or …
5date — I. n. Time, epoch, era, age. II. v. a. Fix the date of, note the time of, affix a date to. III. v. n. Begin, be reckoned, be dated …
6affix an earlier date — index antedate Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
7affix — I. transitive verb Etymology: Latin affixus, past participle of affigere to fasten to, from ad + figere to fasten more at fix Date: 1533 1. to attach physically < affix a stamp to a letter > 2. to attach in any way ; add, append …
8affix — af|fix1 [əˈfıks] v [T often passive] [Date: 1500 1600; : Medieval Latin; Origin: affixare, from Latin affigere, from ad to + figere to fasten ] formal to fasten or stick something to something else affix sth to sth ▪ A label must be affixed to… …
9mis|date — «mihs DAYT», verb, dat|ed, dat|ing, noun. –v.t. to date wrongly or incorrectly; assign or affix an incorrect date to: »Friday s newspaper was misdated as Saturday. –n. a wrong or incorrect date …
10post-date — verb 1》 [usu. as adjective post dated] affix or assign a date later than the actual one to (a document or event). 2》 occur or come at a later date than …