释义 |
al·low·ance I. \əˈlau̇ən(t)s\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English allowaunce, from Middle French allouaunce approbation (from allouer to approve + -aunce -ance) & alouaunce action of leasing, from aloer, alouer to place, use, grant + -aunce -ance 1. a. archaic : approval, approbation b. obsolete : acknowledgment 2. : something that is allowed : a share or portion allotted or granted < an allowance of time for stopovers > < allowances for depreciation > a. (1) : a sum granted as a reimbursement or a bounty or as appropriate for such purposes as personal or household expenses < an officer's pay and allowances > < a schoolboy's weekly allowance > < per diem allowances in lieu of subsistence — U.S. Code > < cost-of-living allowances > < spending the winter in California on the allowance he gets — Hamilton Basso > (2) law : a sum in addition to the regular taxable costs awarded by court to a party in a difficult case — called also extra allowance b. : a fixed amount allowed < a sailor's daily allowance of grog > < the 66-pound free-luggage allowance granted by transatlantic air lines > c. (1) : a customary deduction from the gross weight of goods, different in different countries (2) : a reduction from a list price or stated price (as one granted on used products turned in or because of a previous credit) < a trade-in allowance > d. : a concession or privilege accorded a contestant to make his chances more nearly equal to his competitors': as (1) : an allowed deduction from the weight a racehorse is required to carry < maidens were given special allowances > (2) : a deduction from the actual elapsed time of a racing yacht computed against a scratch boat's elapsed time e. : nonproductive time added in time study to the actual or base time of an operation to allow for fatigue, personal needs, and delays — compare base time, standard time f. : clearance in founding g. : an allowed dimensional difference between mating parts of a machine (as between a shaft and a bearing in which it turns) — compare tolerance 3 3. : the act of allowing : authorization, permission, sanction < without the king's will or the state's allowance — Shakespeare > < no newspaper was suffered to appear without his allowance — T.B.Macaulay > 4. : the taking into account of circumstances (as mitigating circumstances) or of contingencies — often used with the verb make and the preposition for < make allowances for the inexperience of youth > < allowance must be made for what was then the fashionable pose — R.B.Merriman > < regional differences must be recognized and allowance made for them in any generalizations — C.R.Woodward > II. transitive verb (-ed/-ing/-s) 1. : to put upon a fixed allowance (as of provisions and drink) < the captain allowanced his crew > 2. : to supply in a fixed and limited quantity |