credited / ˈkrɛd ɪt /

被引用的被引用被引用的信息被引用的资料

credited3 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. commendation or honor given for some action, quality, etc.: The charity deserves credit for helping many poor families make ends meet during the recession.
  2. a source of pride or honor: You are a credit to your school.
  3. the ascription or acknowledgment of something as due or properly attributable to a person, institution, etc.: He got credit for research actually done by his colleague.It is always best to give credit where credit’s due.
v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to believe; put confidence in; have faith in; trust.
  2. to bring honor, esteem, etc., to; reflect well upon.
  3. Bookkeeping. to enter upon the credit side of an account; give credit for or to.
  4. Education. to award educational credits to: They credited me with three hours in history.
v. 动词组 verb
  1. credit to / with to ascribe to a: In former times many herbs were credited with healing powers.

credited 近义词

v. 动词 verb

believe, depend on

v. 动词 verb

accredit, assign to

更多credited例句

  1. Issues around one wage, getting rid of the tip credit and paying waitstaff not sub-minimum-wage anymore, but with that comes tip sharing.
  2. The first company Team8 Fintech is building will provide an engine to evaluate credit risk of small- and medium-sized enterprises in e-commerce.
  3. Paycheck Protection Program funds are gone, and for most businesses, revenue hasn’t nearly recovered — but they have neither access to unlimited credit nor the means to pay it back.
  4. I started my credit card processing company, Gravity Payments, 16 years ago to support these small businesses.
  5. They often cite the trillions in fiscal spending and super-loose monetary policy that have deluged the economy with cheap credit.
  6. But give the Kingdom credit for its sense of mercy: The lashes will be administered only 50 at a time.
  7. To his credit, Huckabee is conscious of the fact that he will need a cluster of deep-pocketed patrons and bundlers.
  8. To be sure, Jefferson did share the credit, but not in the way such a resolution might be interpreted.
  9. That could include private financial or personal information—like the credit-card numbers you used to pay for the corrupted Wi-Fi.
  10. And much of the credit to her transformation is owed to a finishing school that caters to women just like her.
  11. After all, here was a babe equipped to face the exigencies of a censorious world; in looks and apparel a credit to any father.
  12. The result of the restoration of trade, banking, and credit to earlier and more normal conditions has been steadily apparent.
  13. He went to a bank in the little town where he had other friends from whom he had never asked credit.
  14. I must make no mistake, and blunder into a national type of features, all wrong; if I make your mask, it must do us credit.
  15. The so-called war credit banks are designed to serve this purpose.