A distinctive characteristic or attribute.
To assign a resource to a particular person or cause.
Making of small cuttings on the ears of farm animals.
1 There was absolutely not the slightest earmark of the Negro about them.
2 For example, some members of Congress post some earmark requests online.
3 A third option was to earmark revenues from existing carbon markets.
4 These minor obligations do not earmark more than an hour in the day.
5 Catch those yearling ewes with the wether earmark and change to the shoe-string.
6 Abandon the R1 trillion nuclear deal and earmark additional funding for education opportunities instead.
7 We urge you to earmark a greater proportion of foreign assistance to women's organizations.
8 But attempts to earmark it for the community had been stopped by red tape.
9 We are going to earmark a burial site for children.
10 The earmark for the project, in the southeast part of Alaska, was later rescinded.
11 The least earmark would have turned the scale, but he could not find it.
12 Help clients earmark the assets they'd like to donate .
13 Nearly half of last year's earmark dollars were included in the Pentagon's spending bill.
14 After the 2011 earmark ban, evidence of clout disappeared.
15 Well, the Four-Bar-M earmark is a crop and an under-bit right and a swallow-fork left.
16 The notion that you can earmark certain coins as tainted is an unpractical individualist superstition.
Other examples for "earmark"
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About this term Verb
Indicative · Present