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granter

/grant, grahnt/US // grænt, grɑnt //UK // (ɡrɑːnt) //

授予者,赠与者,赠予者,赠与人

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to bestow or confer, especially by a formal act: to grant a charter.
    • : to give or accord: to grant permission.
    • : to agree or accede to: to grant a request.
    • : to admit or concede; accept for the sake of argument: I grant that point.
    • : to transfer or convey, especially by deed or writing: to grant property.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : something granted, as a privilege or right, a sum of money, or a tract of land: Several major foundations made large grants to fund the research project.
    • : the act of granting.
    • : Law. a transfer of property.
    • : a geographical unit in Vermont, Maine, and New Hampshire, originally a grant of land to a person or group of people.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Clark acknowledged all cheer team members were invited to the optional club practices except Grant’s daughter and Ingalls’ daughter.

  • In sum, as Grant wrote last year, “Managers are constantly betting on the wrong people—and turning down the right ones.”

  • Bradford used the money to pay her previously full-time workers for their reduced hours, which meant that the loan should turn into a grant.

  • A McKinsey analysis of 54 countries estimates that governments had committed $10 trillion by June, through grants, loans, and furlough payments to unemployment benefits and welfare.

  • This story was supported by a “Reporters in the Field” cross-border grant, hosted by n-ost and the Robert Bosch Foundation.

  • And then that chorus kicks in, and the young lady formerly known as Lizzy Grant transforms into the princess of darkness.

  • In 1945 or 1946, Hitch and Alma were in New York with Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman, on a publicity tour.

  • Grant's pal Howard Hughes offered to fly them back to Los Angeles in his private plane.

  • But a project out of Stanford University is hoping to grant Turkers agency—and might begin to revolutionize the industry.

  • It does not grant citizenship or the right to stay here permanently, or offer the same benefits that citizens receive.

  • The single employer rightly knows that there is a wage higher than he can pay and hours shorter than he can grant.

  • When shall fond woman cease to give—when shall mean and sordid man be satisfied with something less than all she has to grant?

  • You will grant that the individual in the controversy would likely be able to judge more correctly with regard to values?

  • Democracy, let us grant it, is the best system of government as yet operative in this world of sin.

  • This evidently explains but little of the real reason both of the grant and its limitation.