Skip to main content

on credit

/kred-it/US // ˈkrɛd ɪt //UK // (ˈkrɛdɪt) //

赊账,贷款,赊销,贷方

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 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.
    • : a source of pride or honor: You are a credit to your school.
    • : 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.
    • : Usually credits . acknowledgment of a person’s contribution to the making of a movie or television program, typically displayed in a list that scrolls down the screen at the beginning or end: She got screen credits for photography.a similar acknowledgment in a publication: The paper’s policy is to list credits for theater productions at the end of reviews.
    • : trustworthiness; credibility: a witness of credit.
    • : influence or authority resulting from the confidence of others or from one's reputation.
    • : favorable repute; reputation; esteem.
    • : Finance. reputation of solvency and honesty, entitling a person or business to be trusted in buying or borrowing: Your credit is good.an agreement to entrust a buyer with goods or services without immediate payment, based on confidence in the buyer’s ability and intention to pay: She bought the air conditioner on credit with no money down. the time allowed for payment of goods or services obtained on trust: 90 days' credit.an amount of money that a financial institution lends or makes available to a client, to be repaid typically in monthly installments including interest: The bank extended the couple credit to finance the remodeling of their home.
    • : a sum of money due to a person; anything valuable standing on the credit side of an account against which a person may draw: He has a store credit of $50.
    • : Education. official acceptance and recording of the work completed by a student in a particular course of study.one unit of academic credit; a credit hour.
    • : Bookkeeping. an entry of payment or value received on an account.the right-hand side of an account on which such entries are made.an entry, or the total shown, on the credit side.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to believe; put confidence in; have faith in; trust.
    • : to bring honor, esteem, etc., to; reflect well upon.
    • : Bookkeeping. to enter upon the credit side of an account; give credit for or to.
    • : Education. to award educational credits to: They credited me with three hours in history.
  1. 1
    • : credit to / with to ascribe to a: In former times many herbs were credited with healing powers.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Issues around one wage, getting rid of the tip credit and paying waitstaff not sub-minimum-wage anymore, but with that comes tip sharing.

  • The first company Team8 Fintech is building will provide an engine to evaluate credit risk of small- and medium-sized enterprises in e-commerce.

  • 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.

  • I started my credit card processing company, Gravity Payments, 16 years ago to support these small businesses.

  • They often cite the trillions in fiscal spending and super-loose monetary policy that have deluged the economy with cheap credit.

  • But give the Kingdom credit for its sense of mercy: The lashes will be administered only 50 at a time.

  • To his credit, Huckabee is conscious of the fact that he will need a cluster of deep-pocketed patrons and bundlers.

  • To be sure, Jefferson did share the credit, but not in the way such a resolution might be interpreted.

  • That could include private financial or personal information—like the credit-card numbers you used to pay for the corrupted Wi-Fi.

  • And much of the credit to her transformation is owed to a finishing school that caters to women just like her.

  • After all, here was a babe equipped to face the exigencies of a censorious world; in looks and apparel a credit to any father.

  • The result of the restoration of trade, banking, and credit to earlier and more normal conditions has been steadily apparent.

  • He went to a bank in the little town where he had other friends from whom he had never asked credit.

  • 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.

  • The so-called war credit banks are designed to serve this purpose.