accrue 的定义
ac·crued, ac·cru·ing.
- to happen or result as a natural growth, addition, etc.
- to be added as a matter of periodic gain or advantage, as interest on money.
- Law. to become a present and enforceable right or demand.
accrue 近义词
increase by addition or growth, often financial
更多accrue例句
- Any additional time off would come out of his accrued sick and vacation time, he was told.
- It sought, unsuccessfully, to reduce nurses’ accrued vacation time and to cut pension benefits for all employees who didn’t work full time.
- Over at Palantir, which we have covered extensively the past few weeks, the company is even more of an outlier, with large-contract government sales that accrue over many years.
- The order also does not prevent landlords from charging fees or accruing interest, if those are included under the renter’s lease.
- Subscription services, however, retained almost three-quarters of the extra viewing they had accrued over lockdown.
- The fines accrue thousands of dollars in interest every week.
- You have to accrue power, use it in ethical ways, and hope that voters reward you for doing this.
- Makes your kids want to do their chores, by allowing them to purchase prizes with the points they accrue.
- Makes your kids want to do their chores by allowing them to purchase prizes with the points they accrue.
- And Blizzard takes a 15% cut of the real-money transactions; the commissions that used to flow to eBay now accrue to them.
- From this time, by the help of these machines, immense and incalculable riches will accrue to the nation.
- Other cases may occur, in which great advantage would accrue, if the principle were once admitted.
- No possible benefit could accrue to Sylvia from a disclosure of his suspicion that he had borne the letter to her grandfather.
- His excellency also referred to the advantages which would accrue from the establishment of an agricultural society.
- The only gain that would accrue from his confession would be, he considered, a subjective gain to himself.