释义 |
View usage for: (əkruː) Word forms: 3rd person singular presenttense accrues, present participle accruing, past tense, past participle accrued1. verbIf money or interest accrues or if you accrue it, it gradually increases in amount over a period of time. [business] I owed £5,000–part of this was accrued interest. [VERB-ed] If you do not pay within 28 days, interest will accrue. [VERB] Officials say the options will offer investors a longer time in which to accrue profits. [VERB noun] 2. verbIf things such as profits or benefits accrue to someone, they are added to over a period of time. [formal] ...the expectation that profits will accrue. [VERB] ...a project from which considerable benefit will accrue to the community. [VERB + to] In many cases, the fee structure alone will exceed the tax benefits accrued. [VERB-ed] [Also V n, V to n ] More Synonyms of accrue accrue in British English or accrew (əˈkruː) verbWord forms: -crues, -cruing or -crued (intransitive)1. to increase by growth or addition, esp (of capital) to increase by periodic addition of interest 2. (often foll by to) to fall naturally (to); come into the possession (of); result (for) 3. law (of a right or demand) to become capable of being enforced Word origin C15: from Old French accreue growth, ultimately from Latin accrēscere to increase, from ad- to, in addition + crēscere to grow accrue in American English (əˈkru) verb intransitiveWord forms: acˈcrued or acˈcruing1. to come as a natural growth, advantage, or right (to) 2. to be added periodically as an increase said esp. of interest on money verb transitive3. to accumulate periodically as an increase savings accounts accrue interest Word origin ME acreuen < OFr acreu, pp. of acroistre, increase < L accrescere: see accretion (əkru) Word forms: (present) accrues, (past) accrued, (perfect) accrued, (progressive) accruing verb( Accounting: Financial statements) If you accrue an expense or income, you recognize it before it has been paid or been received. COLLOCATIONS: ~ expenses~ income~ interest I owed $5000, part of which was accrued interest. An accrued liability is recognized at the end of the period in cases in which an expense hasbeen incurred but cash has not yet been received. If you accrue an expense or income, you recognize it before it has been paid or been received. Examples of 'accrue' in a sentenceaccrue The loan is secured against the property and interest is accrued annually until the point of payback.Six points accrued from the last 21 on offer.Yet these benefits may not accrue to Britain as a whole.Players accrue points based on their results throughout the year.These benefits accrue because hedging reduces the volatility of receipts and payments.The second right about to accrue to married women is the right to pay their own debts.Point out that interest is now accruing on the invoice.Where is my money and the compound interest that will have accrued over that time?Any points accruing will then count for double.These apply to retired members and those still accruing benefits.It begins accruing from the time you receive your first payment while at university. Benefits already accrued will not be affected.His pictures capture outré but innocent moments in social history that magically accrue significance as time passes.And just as appealing are all the other benefits accrued.They have also accrued a vast amount of experience in the business of projecting their music into wide open spaces.It is about accruing league points.The fee is accrued over the duration of your tenure in the property and is usually retained from the proceeds from the resale.It argues that the Government cannot take away accrued redundancy rights for existing employers.Second, the bond price is quoted net of accrued interest.If you deposit it, the interest accrued on savings will help offset the interest accrued on debt.If not, will he or she have to pay accrued self-employment taxes with interest and penalties?That suggests your wife should pay tax only in the year in which the amount was accrued, not the year inwhich it was received.These benefits would accrue over time and would be relatively small, if any, in earlier years.Although bonus money is accrued during the course of the year, it can be clawed back again by the bank if the fourth quarter proves especially tough.Indeed, I would guarantee that one third of the cash accruing from higher fees is spent on outreach of this kind. British English: accrue VERB If money or interest accrues or if you accrue it, it gradually increases in amount over a period of time. If you do not pay within 28 days, interest will accrue. - American English: accrue
- Brazilian Portuguese: incidir
- Chinese: 累积
- European Spanish: acumularse
- French: être cumulé
- German: sich ansammeln
- Italian: aumentare
- Japanese: 蓄積する
- Korean: 누적되다
- European Portuguese: incidir
- Latin American Spanish: acumularse
Definition (of money or interest) to increase gradually over a period of time You should never let interest payments accrue. Synonyms issue grow build up be added spring up Additional synonymsDefinition to accumulate or collect We didn't enquire as to how she had amassed her fortune. Synonyms collect, gather, assemble, compile, accumulate, aggregate, pile up, garner, hoard, scrape together, rake up, heap up Definition to gather (objects, such as stamps) as a hobby or for study Two young girls were collecting firewood. Synonyms gather, save, assemble, heap, accumulate, aggregate, amass, stockpile, hoardDefinition to make or grow larger plans to enlarge the park into a 30,000 all-seater stadium Synonyms expand, increase, extend, add to, build up, widen, intensify, blow up (informal), heighten, broaden, inflate, lengthen, magnify, amplify, augment, make bigger, elongate, make larger - accredit
- accredited
- accretion
- accrue
- accumulate
- accumulation
- accuracy
|