Vouched vs Voucher - What's the difference?
vouched | voucher |
(vouch)
To take responsibility for; to express confidence in; to witness; to obtest.
To warrant; to maintain by affirmations; to attest; to affirm; to avouch.
* Atterbury
To back; to support; to confirm.
* Milton
To call into court to warrant and defend, or to make good a warranty of title.
* Blackstone
(obsolete) To call; to summon.
* Sir T. Elyot
To bear witness; to give testimony or full attestation.
* Jonathan Swift
To call as a witness.
* Dryden
To assert; to aver; to declare.
Warrant; attestation.
A piece of paper that entitles the holder to a discount, or that can be exchanged for goods and services.
A receipt.
One who or that which vouches.
* 1836 , The New Sporting Magazine (volume 11, page 227)
To establish the authenticity of; to vouch for.
To provide a vouch for (an expenditure).
To provide (a beneficiary) with a voucher.
As verbs the difference between vouched and voucher
is that vouched is (vouch) while voucher is to establish the authenticity of; to vouch for.As a noun voucher is
a piece of paper that entitles the holder to a discount, or that can be exchanged for goods and services.vouched
English
Verb
(head)vouch
English
Verb
(es)- They made him ashamed to vouch the truth of the relation, and afterwards to credit it.
- I can vouch that the match took place.
- Me damp horror chilled / At such bold words vouched with a deed so bold.
- He vouches' the tenant in tail, who ' vouches over the common vouchee.
- [They] vouch (as I might say) to their aid the authority of the writers.
- He will not believe her until the elector of Hanover shall vouch for the truth of what she has affirmed.
- Vouch the silent stars and conscious moon.
- (Shakespeare)
Noun
(es)voucher
English
Noun
(en noun)- To the fashionable world he cannot be a stranger and his having married a sister of the Duke of Leeds is a voucher for my assertion.