granter / grænt, grɑnt /

授予者赠与者赠予者赠与人

granter2 个定义

v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to bestow or confer, especially by a formal act: to grant a charter.
  2. to give or accord: to grant permission.
  3. to agree or accede to: to grant a request.
n. 名词 noun
  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.
  2. the act of granting.
  3. Law. a transfer of property.
  4. a geographical unit in Vermont, Maine, and New Hampshire, originally a grant of land to a person or group of people.

granter 近义词

granter

等同于 lender

更多granter例句

  1. Clark acknowledged all cheer team members were invited to the optional club practices except Grant’s daughter and Ingalls’ daughter.
  2. In sum, as Grant wrote last year, “Managers are constantly betting on the wrong people—and turning down the right ones.”
  3. 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.
  4. 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.
  5. This story was supported by a “Reporters in the Field” cross-border grant, hosted by n-ost and the Robert Bosch Foundation.
  6. And then that chorus kicks in, and the young lady formerly known as Lizzy Grant transforms into the princess of darkness.
  7. In 1945 or 1946, Hitch and Alma were in New York with Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman, on a publicity tour.
  8. Grant's pal Howard Hughes offered to fly them back to Los Angeles in his private plane.
  9. But a project out of Stanford University is hoping to grant Turkers agency—and might begin to revolutionize the industry.
  10. It does not grant citizenship or the right to stay here permanently, or offer the same benefits that citizens receive.
  11. The single employer rightly knows that there is a wage higher than he can pay and hours shorter than he can grant.
  12. When shall fond woman cease to give—when shall mean and sordid man be satisfied with something less than all she has to grant?
  13. You will grant that the individual in the controversy would likely be able to judge more correctly with regard to values?
  14. Democracy, let us grant it, is the best system of government as yet operative in this world of sin.
  15. This evidently explains but little of the real reason both of the grant and its limitation.