释义 |
accrue
accrueaccumulate, grow, increase; added as a matter of periodic gain: accrue interest on a savings account Not to be confused with:ecru – a pale beige color, as unbleached linenac·crue A0045800 (ə-kro͞o′)v. ac·crued, ac·cru·ing, ac·crues v.intr.1. To come to one as a gain, addition, or increment: interest accruing in my savings account.2. To increase, accumulate, or come about as a result of growth: common sense that accrues with experience.3. To come into existence as a claim that is legally enforceable.v.tr. To accumulate over time: I have accrued 15 days of sick leave. [Middle English acreuen, from Old French acreu, past participle of acroistre, to increase, add, from Latin accrēscere, to grow : ad-, ad- + crēscere, to arise; see ker- in Indo-European roots.] ac·cru′a·ble adj.ac·crue′ment n.accrue (əˈkruː) or accrewvb (intr) , -crues, -cruing or -crued1. (Banking & Finance) to increase by growth or addition, esp (of capital) to increase by periodic addition of interest2. (often foll by to) to fall naturally (to); come into the possession (of); result (for)3. (Law) law (of a right or demand) to become capable of being enforced[C15: from Old French accreue growth, ultimately from Latin accrēscere to increase, from ad- to, in addition + crēscere to grow]ac•crue (əˈkru) v. -crued, -cru•ing. v.i. 1. to happen or result as a natural growth, addition, etc. 2. to be added as a matter of periodic gain or advantage, as interest on money. 3. Law. to become a present and enforceable right. v.t. 4. to accumulate or earn over time: to accrue interest. [1425–75; probably < Anglo-French, Middle French accreu(e), past participle of ac(c)reistre to increase < Latin accrēscere to grow] ac•cru′a•ble, adj. ac•crue′ment, n. accrue Past participle: accrued Gerund: accruing
Present |
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I accrue | you accrue | he/she/it accrues | we accrue | you accrue | they accrue |
Preterite |
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I accrued | you accrued | he/she/it accrued | we accrued | you accrued | they accrued |
Present Continuous |
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I am accruing | you are accruing | he/she/it is accruing | we are accruing | you are accruing | they are accruing |
Present Perfect |
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I have accrued | you have accrued | he/she/it has accrued | we have accrued | you have accrued | they have accrued |
Past Continuous |
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I was accruing | you were accruing | he/she/it was accruing | we were accruing | you were accruing | they were accruing |
Past Perfect |
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I had accrued | you had accrued | he/she/it had accrued | we had accrued | you had accrued | they had accrued |
Future |
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I will accrue | you will accrue | he/she/it will accrue | we will accrue | you will accrue | they will accrue |
Future Perfect |
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I will have accrued | you will have accrued | he/she/it will have accrued | we will have accrued | you will have accrued | they will have accrued |
Future Continuous |
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I will be accruing | you will be accruing | he/she/it will be accruing | we will be accruing | you will be accruing | they will be accruing |
Present Perfect Continuous |
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I have been accruing | you have been accruing | he/she/it has been accruing | we have been accruing | you have been accruing | they have been accruing |
Future Perfect Continuous |
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I will have been accruing | you will have been accruing | he/she/it will have been accruing | we will have been accruing | you will have been accruing | they will have been accruing |
Past Perfect Continuous |
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I had been accruing | you had been accruing | he/she/it had been accruing | we had been accruing | you had been accruing | they had been accruing |
Conditional |
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I would accrue | you would accrue | he/she/it would accrue | we would accrue | you would accrue | they would accrue |
Past Conditional |
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I would have accrued | you would have accrued | he/she/it would have accrued | we would have accrued | you would have accrued | they would have accrued | ThesaurusVerb | 1. | accrue - grow by addition; "The interest accrues"redound - contribute; "Everything redounded to his glory"increase - become bigger or greater in amount; "The amount of work increased" | | 2. | accrue - come into the possession of; "The house accrued to the oldest son"fallchange hands, change owners - be transferred to another owner; "This restaurant changed hands twice last year"devolve, return, fall, pass - be inherited by; "The estate fell to my sister"; "The land returned to the family"; "The estate devolved to an heir that everybody had assumed to be dead"light, fall - fall to somebody by assignment or lot; "The task fell to me"; "It fell to me to notify the parents of the victims" |
accrueverb accumulate, issue, increase, grow, collect, gather, flow, build up, enlarge, follow, ensue, pile up, amass, spring up, stockpile You should never let interest payments accrue.accrueverbTo bring together so as to increase in mass or number:accumulate, agglomerate, aggregate, amass, collect, cumulate, garner, gather, hive, pile up, roll up.Translationsaccroitreaugmentergagnergrandirgrossiraccumularesorgereкапатьaccrue
accrue to (something)To be paid or credited into an account or a store of something. How much interest has accrued to your savings account? By June, eight more days will have accrued to your vacation time.See also: accrueaccrue to someone or something[used of interest paid on money] to be credited to an account or to a person's account. Interest will accrue to your account as long as the account is active.See also: accrueaccrue
AccrueTo increase; to augment; to come to by way of increase; to be added as an increase, profit, or damage. Acquired; falling due; made or executed; matured; occurred; received; vested; was created; was incurred. To attach itself to, as a subordinate or accessory claim or demand arises out of, and is joined to, its principal. The term is also used of independent or original demands, meaning to arise, to happen, to come into force or existence; to vest, as in the phrase, "The right of action did not accrue within six years." To become a present right or demand; to come to pass. Interest on money that a depositor has in a bank savings account accrues, so that after a certain time the amount will be increased by the amount of interest it has earned. A Cause of Action, the facts that give a person a right to judicial relief, usually accrues on the date that the injury to the plaintiff is sustained. When the injury is not readily discoverable, the cause of action accrues when the plaintiff in fact discovers the injury. This occurs frequently in cases of Fraud or Malpractice. A woman, for example, has an appendectomy. Three years after the surgery, she still experiences dull pain on her right side. She is examined by another physician who discovers a piece of surgical sponge near the area of the operation. Although the injury had occurred at the time of surgery three years earlier, in this case the cause of action for Medical Malpractice accrues on the date that the sponge is discovered by the second doctor. This distinction is important for purposes of the running of the Statute of Limitations, the time set by law within which a lawsuit must be commenced after a cause of action accrues. In cases involving injuries that cannot be readily discovered, it would be unfair to bar a plaintiff from bringing a lawsuit because he or she does not start the suit within the required time from the date of injury. accruev. 1) growing or adding to, such as interest on a debt or investment which continues to accumulate. 2) the coming into being of the right to bring a lawsuit. For example, the right to sue on a contract only accrues when the contract is breached (not mere suspicion that it might be breached) or when the other party repudiates the contract (anticipatory breach). accrue (of a right or demand) to become capable of being enforced.TO ACCRUE. Literally to grow to; as the interest accrues on the principal.Accruing costs are those which become due and are created after judgment ofan execution. 2.-To accrue means also to arise, to happen, to come to pass; as thestatute of limitations does not commence running until the cause of actionhas accrued. 1 Bouv. Inst. n. 861; 2 Rawle, 277; 10 Watts, 363; Bac. Abr.Limitation of Actions, D 3. accrue
AccrueTo earn but not collect. For example, if a company makes $1 million in revenue but has not collected $250,000 before it must make its quarterly statement, it is said to have accrued $250,000 in revenue. By the same token, the interest a bond has earned between coupon payments is said to accrue. See also: Accruals.accrueTo accumulate; grow. A $100,000 loan at 7 percent interest accrues interest at the rate of $7,000 per year, or $19.18 per day. The mortgage holder on a property being sold will typically tell the closing company a payoff amount accurate as of the anticipated closing date, with a daily accrual for each day closing is delayed. See ACCR See ACCRaccrue
Synonyms for accrueverb accumulateSynonyms- accumulate
- issue
- increase
- grow
- collect
- gather
- flow
- build up
- enlarge
- follow
- ensue
- pile up
- amass
- spring up
- stockpile
Synonyms for accrueverb to bring together so as to increase in mass or numberSynonyms- accumulate
- agglomerate
- aggregate
- amass
- collect
- cumulate
- garner
- gather
- hive
- pile up
- roll up
Synonyms for accrueverb grow by additionRelated Wordsverb come into the possession ofSynonymsRelated Words- change hands
- change owners
- devolve
- return
- fall
- pass
- light
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