welcome synd ..
may God bless you and shine upon you ...
syn·di·cate (sĭn'dĭ-kĭt)
n.
An association of people or firms authorized to undertake a duty or transact specific business.
An association of people or firms formed to engage in an enterprise or promote a common interest.
A loose affiliation of gangsters in control of organized criminal activities.
An agency that sells articles, features, or photographs for publication in a number of newspapers or periodicals simultaneously.
A company consisting of a number of separate newspapers; a newspaper chain.
The office, position, or jurisdiction of a syndic or body of syndics.
v. (-kāt') syn·di·cat·ed, syn·di·cat·ing, syn·di·cates
v. tr.
To organize into or manage as a syndicate.
To sell shares in.
To sell (a comic strip or column, for example) through a syndicate for simultaneous publication in newspapers or periodicals.
To sell (a television series, for example) directly to independent stations.
v. intr.
To join together in a syndicate.
[French syndicat, from Old French, office of syndic, from Medieval Latin syndicātus, from Late Latin syndicus, syndic; see syndic.]
syn'di·ca'tion n., syn'di·ca'tor n.Origin:
1595–1605; < F < LL syndicus city official < Gk sındikos
counsel for defendant, equiv. to syn- syn- + dik- (s. of dik) justice + -os n. suffix
[French, from Old French sindiz, from Late Latin syndicus, from Greek sundikos,
public advocate : sun-, syn- + dikē,
justice; see deik- in Indo-European roots.]