: to add as a supplement or appendix (as in a book)
notes appended to each chapter
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Add Append Onto Your Vocabulary
Append is a somewhat formal word. Lawyers, for example, often speak of appending items to other documents, and lawmakers frequently append small bills to big ones, hoping that everyone will be paying attention only to the main part of the big bill and won't notice. When we append a small separate section to the end of a report or a book, we call it an appendix. But in the early years of email, the words we decided on were attach and attachment, probably because appendixes are thought of as unimportant, whereas the attachment is often the whole reason for sending an email.
Recent Examples on the WebThe Times didn’t append a correction to the story as it might be expected to do when fixing a factual inaccuracy. Allysia Finley, WSJ, 6 June 2022 Barrett also called for platforms to append a label to the video, identifying it as a simulation and directing users to authoritative sources of imagery and news about the Russian invasion. Alexandra S. Levine, Forbes, 17 Mar. 2022 While Democrats have promised to append the aid to a long-term spending deal, known as the omnibus, lawmakers have until March 11 to reach a bipartisan bargain with Republicans, otherwise key federal agencies are set to shutdown. Democrat-gazette Staff From Wire Reports, Arkansas Online, 3 Mar. 2022 The University of Alabama System’s Board of Trustees initially wanted to append Lucy’s name to Graves’. Ruth Serven Smith | Rserven@al.com, al, 25 Feb. 2022 But attackers were able to inconspicuously append a malicious script to the file without impacting Microsoft's stamp of approval. Lily Hay Newman, Wired, 5 Jan. 2022 This lack of basic, seemingly simple technology creates an uneven playing field that requires other teams to append additional processes to keep everyone working at the same pace at the expense of maximizing potential productivity. Jens Gamperl, Forbes, 4 Oct. 2021 Zaha Hadid drew up an unbuilt scheme to take the building down to its skeleton, add 40 floors, and (if the rendering was to be believed) somehow magically append a nonexistent park in front. Christopher Bonanos, Curbed, 12 Aug. 2021 Facebook chose to append a generic label to most of that content rather than ban it. Elizabeth Dwoskin, Anchorage Daily News, 4 June 2021 See More
Word History
Etymology
Latin appendere, to hang, weigh out, from ad- + pendere to weigh — more at pendant