accredit 的定义
- to provide or send with credentials; designate officially: to accredit an envoy.
- to certify as meeting all formal official requirements of academic excellence, curriculum, facilities, etc.
- to make authoritative, creditable, or reputable; sanction.
- to regard as true; believe.
- to ascribe or attribute to: He was accredited with having said it.
- to attribute or ascribe; consider as belonging: an invention accredited to Edison.
accredit 近义词
attribute responsibility or achievement
give authorization or control
更多accredit例句
- They would neither be required to be accredited nor report student results.
- The president then made a recess appointment, and I went to my post fully accredited.
- Like any health care professional degree, ours is externally accredited through the National Accreditation Agency for Clinical Laboratory Sciences.
- The site also asks whether or not the would-be investor is accredited—a distinction that is determined by a person’s net wealth and that can limit the types of investments they are eligible to make.
- Amid this maneuvering, deans of the state’s American Bar Association-accredited law schools recently threw their support behind their recent graduates being granted immediate licensure without passing the bar exam, as is normally required.
- The most obvious and palpable facts discredit these Judaists and accredit me.
- An absolute criterion of truth must at once accredit itself, as well as other things.
- Those who have grown it in the several grape districts of New York accredit the vines with about all the faults a grape can have.
- But the doctor being himself in an unusually amiable attitude, was inclined to accredit others with a like share of good temper.
- He hopelessly began to accredit to Divinity the measure of his own fallibility.