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1 credit
credit [ˈkredɪt]1. nouna. (financial) crédit m• "no credit" « la maison ne fait pas crédit »• in credit [account] approvisionnéb. ( = belief) he's got more sense than people give him credit for il a plus de bon sens qu'on ne le croit2. plural nouna. ( = believe) [+ rumour, news] croireb. to credit sb/sth with (having) certain powers reconnaître à qn/qch certains pouvoirsc. to credit £50 to sb or to sb's account créditer qn de 50 livres4. compounds► credit hour noun ≈ unité f d'enseignement* * *['kredɪt] 1.1) ( resultant praise) mérite m ( for de)to get/take the credit — se voir attribuer/s'attribuer le mérite ( for de)
2) ( subject of pride)to be a credit to somebody/something — faire honneur à quelqu'un/quelque chose
3) ( recognition)he is more intelligent than he is given credit for — il est plus intelligent qu'on ne le croit généralement
4) ( credence) crédit m5) Commerce crédit m2.to be £25 in credit — être créditeur de 25 livres sterling
credits plural noun Cinema, Television générique m3.transitive verb1)to credit somebody with — attribuer à quelqu'un [achievement]
3) ( believe) croire -
2 credit
['kredit] 1. noun1) (time allowed for payment of goods etc after they have been received: We don't give credit at this shop.) crédit2) (money loaned (by a bank).) crédit3) (trustworthiness regarding ability to pay for goods etc: Your credit is good.) solvabilité4) ((an entry on) the side of an account on which payments received are entered: Our credits are greater than our debits.) crédit5) (the sum of money which someone has in an account at a bank: Your credit amounts to 2,014 dollars.) compte créditeur6) (belief or trust: This theory is gaining credit.) crédibilité7) ((American) a certificate to show that a student has completed a course which counts towards his degree.) unité2. verb1) (to enter (a sum of money) on the credit side (of an account): This cheque was credited to your account last month.) créditer2) ((with with) to think of (a person or thing) as having: He was credited with magical powers.) attribuer à3) (to believe (something) to be possible: Well, would you credit that!) croire•- creditably - creditor - credits - credit card - be a credit to someone - be a credit to - do someone credit - do credit - give someone credit for something - give credit for something - give someone credit - give credit - on credit - take the credit for something - take credit for something - take the credit - take credit -
3 account
account [əˈkaʊnt]1. nouna. compte m• to pay £50 on account verser un acompte de 50 livres• cash or account? (in hotel, bar) vous payez comptant ou je le mets sur votre note ?b. ( = explanation) explication f► to take + account• to take sth/sb into account tenir compte de qch/qn• to take no account of sth ne pas tenir compte de qch► on + account• on this or that account pour cette raison2. plural nounaccounts ( = calculation) comptabilité f• to do/keep the accounts faire/tenir la comptabilité3. compounds━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━‼|/b] [b]account ≠ acompte━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━a. ( = explain, justify) [+ expenses, one's conduct] justifier ; [+ circumstances] expliquer• there's no accounting for taste(PROV) chacun son goût• three people have not yet been accounted for (after accident) trois personnes n'ont pas encore été retrouvéesb. ( = represent) représenter• this accounts for 10% of the total cela représente 10 % du chiffre total* * *[ə'kaʊnt] 1.1) (in bank, post office) compte m (at, with à)in my/his account — sur mon/son compte
2) Commerce ( credit arrangement) compte mto charge something to ou put something on somebody's account — mettre quelque chose sur le compte de quelqu'un
on account — ( as part payment) d'acompte
to settle an account — ( in shop) régler un compte; ( in hotel) régler une note
3) ( in advertising) budget m (de publicité)4) ( bill) facture f5) ( consideration)to take something into account —
6) ( description) compte-rendu m; ( if contentious) version f7) ( impression)8) ( indicating reason)on this ou that account — pour cette raison
on my/his account — (because of me/him) à cause de moi/lui
10) ( importance)2.accounts plural noun2) ( department) (service m) comptabilité f3.transitive verb soutPhrasal Verbs: -
4 holder
holder n1 ( person who possesses something) (of passport, degree, post) titulaire mf ; (of ticket, record) détenteur/-trice m/f ; (of cup, title) tenant/-e m/f ; ( of key) détenteur/-trice m/f ; ( of shares) porteur/-euse m/f ; account holder titulaire d'un compte ; credit card/passport holder titulaire d'une carte de crédit/d'un passeport ; record/ticket holder détenteur/-trice d'un record/billet ; cup/title holder tenant/-e d'une coupe/d'un titre ;2 (container, stand) support m.
См. также в других словарях:
credit — cred|it1 [ kredıt ] noun *** ▸ 1 arrangement to pay later ▸ 2 money you have right to ▸ 3 praise for something you did ▸ 4 at college/university ▸ 5 money added to account ▸ 6 movie etc. someone worked on ▸ 7 list of who made movie etc. ▸ +… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
credit — [[t]kre̱dɪt[/t]] ♦♦ credits, crediting, credited 1) N UNCOUNT: oft on N If you are allowed credit, you are allowed to pay for goods or services several weeks or months after you have received them. The group can t get credit to buy farming… … English dictionary
credit — an entry made on the right hand side of an account and indicating a gain to a liability, owner s equity or revenue account. Glossary of Business Terms money loaned. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary * * * ▪ I. credit cred‧it 1 [ˈkredt] noun 1.… … Financial and business terms
credit — I UK [ˈkredɪt] / US noun Word forms credit : singular credit plural credits *** 1) [uncountable] an arrangement to receive goods from a shop or money from a bank and pay for it later on credit: I don t like buying things on credit. give/offer… … English dictionary
Credit — Money loaned. The New York Times Financial Glossary * * * ▪ I. credit cred‧it 1 [ˈkredt] noun 1. [uncountable] COMMERCE an arrangement with a shop, supplier etc to buy something now and pay for it later: • They are saving for new furniture… … Financial and business terms
Credit card interest — Finance Financial markets Bond market … Wikipedia
credit — I. noun Etymology: Middle French, from Old Italian credito, from Latin creditum something entrusted to another, loan, from neuter of creditus, past participle of credere to believe, entrust more at creed Date: 1537 1. reliance on the truth or… … New Collegiate Dictionary
account — ac|count1 W1S2 [əˈkaunt] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(description)¦ 2¦(at a bank)¦ 3 take account of something 4 on account of something 5 accounts 6 on account 7¦(with a shop/company)¦ 8¦(bill)¦ 9¦(arrangement to sell goods)¦ … Dictionary of contemporary English
Credit card — Personal finance Credit and debt Pawnbroker Student loan Employment contract Salary Wage Empl … Wikipedia
credit — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) I n. faith, belief; credibility, trust; credit, borrowing power. v. t. believe, trust; credit. See accounting. II Borrowing power Nouns 1. credit, trust, score, tally, account, tab; loan (see debt);… … English dictionary for students
account — 1 noun 1 DESCRIPTION (C) a) a written or spoken description which gives details of an event: There were several different accounts of the story in the newspapers. | give an account: David gave us a vivid account of his trip to Rio. | blow by blow … Longman dictionary of contemporary English