Enroll \En*roll"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Enrolled}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Enrolling}.] [Pref. en- + roll: cf. F. enr[^o]ler; pref. en- (L. in) + r[^o]le roll or register. See {Roll}, n.] [Written also {enrol}.] 1. To insert in a roil; to register or enter in a list or catalogue or on rolls of court; hence, to record; to insert in records; to leave in writing; as, to enroll men for service; to enroll a decree or a law; also, reflexively, to enlist.
An unwritten law of common right, so engraven in the hearts of our ancestors, and by them so constantly enjoyed and claimed, as that it needed not enrolling. --Milton.
All the citizen capable of bearing arms enrolled themselves. --Prescott.
2. To envelop; to inwrap; to involve. [Obs.] --Spenser.
Tax credits to small businesses for the first five years they offer employee health insurance, for the first five years they extend coverage to employee dependents and for the first five years they enroll employees in a managed-care program.
Rural children in Colombia seldom go beyond the fifth grade. Schools beyond that level simply don't exist in many parts, and when they do, it costs too much for books, uniforms and room and board for peasants to enroll their children.
The study did not enroll enough people to make a direct comparison between the two diets.
She plans to enroll the children, ages 2, 5 and 7, in Lansing-area public schools and wants to earn a teaching degree from Michigan State University.
Largely because of physicians' reluctance to enroll their patients in cancer experiments, officials said, it may take 10 years or longer to assess the value of promising new therapies.
But the target prices, which are guaranteed to farmers if they enroll in the government program, are still high enough to ensure farmers a healthy profit and are far better than what industry analysts predict they would receive on the open market.
Rhode Island's program goes further to enroll students at an early age and give them educational and social help, said Leila Mahoney, DiPrete's senior assistant.
Grammer's co-star Kirstie Alley pleaded unsuccessfully with Ms. Schwartz to spare the actor jail and instead enroll him in a strict alcohol and drug abuse program.
A 1985 study found that 69% of parents with children in Chicago's public schools would enroll their children in private schools if they could afford it.
When Jerrold Schecter was Moscow correspondent for Time magazine in the late 1960s, he and his wife chose to live away from the American enclave, and to enroll their five children in Soviet schools.
The 113 institutions, located in 10 states and Puerto Rico, enroll almost one-half of all the Hispanic college students in the United States.
The 12 defendant schools enroll about 125,000 students.
In some parts of the country, parents line up to enroll their children in immersion programs.
Rejected by the University of North Carolina in 1935, he learned that the principal was behind it but went to enroll anyway. "When I got to the desk, they said, `We told you not to come.'
The goal is to enroll 40 million to 45 million new acres in the reserve.
They found a reliable woman to watch their 5-year-old son for $85 a week, even though that required getting special permission to enroll him in a school near the care-giver's home three miles away.
The draft CW accord now being developed in Geneva would require only that 60 countries have to enroll before the treaty enters into force.
Katzenbach, then an assistant U.S. attorney general in the Kennedy administration, was sent to Tuscaloosa to enroll two black students against the objections of Wallace, who was governor at the time.
And there was a lot of vote-buying at the end; for example, dropping a provision that forces public employees in a handful of holdout states to enroll in Medicare.
You may enroll in it.
What does this mean for the question of gun control today? Well, for example, it means that Congress has the constitutional power to enact a Militia Act of 1992, to require every person who owns a gun or aspires to own one to "enroll" in the militia.
"Every free able-bodied white male citizen" (it was 1792, after all) was required by the act to "enroll" in the militia for training and active service in case of need.
Today Catholic schools enroll 56% of all private-school students, down from 87% in 1965.
The 36 percent increase should allow the program, a favorite of Democrats and Republicans alike, to enroll 180,000 more 4-year-olds from low-income families, according to the administration.
Four hundred students will enroll in doctoral programs overseas, Shi said.
In New Jersey, college students knock on doors and hang around shopping malls, looking for minority-group high-school graduates they can enroll at their school.
If the child doesn't enroll or doesn't gain admission, the programs vary on how much of the investment is refunded.
She says she'll enroll at the University of Miami this fall and major in public relations and business law.
"You will find accounts of semiliterate high school dropouts lured to enroll in expensive training programs with false promises of lucrative jobs, only to have their hopes for a better future cruelly dashed," the secretary wrote.
They hope the limits would encourage states to enroll Medicaid beneficiaries in health maintenance organizations and other fixed-price, prepaid health plans.