Noun
1. approval;
2. money available for a client to borrow
3. an accounting entry acknowledging income or capital items
4. used in the phrase `to your credit' in order to indicate an achievement deserving praise;
5. arrangement for deferred payment for goods and services
6. recognition by a college or university that a course of studies has been successfully completed; typically measured in semester hours
7. a short note recognizing a source of information or of a quoted passage;
8. an entry on a list of persons who contributed to a film or written work
Verb
1. give someone credit for something;
2. give credit for;
3. accounting: enter as credit;
4. have trust in; trust in the truth or veracity of
Any users of credit may overextend themselves.
She brought several persons of good credit to witness to her reputation.
His credit is good.
You must pass the examination to get credit for the course.
Unless paying by credit card, please pay in cash.
Our shop only allows people six months credit.
Do you place any credit in the government's story?
The engineer has many technical innovations to his credit.
We do not sell on credit.
It is very convenient to pay by credit card.
The idea that I could be charged when I'm in credit makes me very angry.
He is one of the greatest British players of recent times and is a credit to his profession.
The main investor in the project is the French bank Credit National.
The economic boom was fueled by easy credit.
I cut my purchases dramatically by the simple expedient of destroying my credit cards.
They may use a credit card for convenience.
I have twenty novels and countless magazine stories to my credit.
On the credit side, he's always been wonderful with his mother.
Leave your cheque book and credit cards at home unless you know you will need them.
If you are already considered a credit risk by a bank, a secured loan might be your only alternative.
You are protected instantly if a thief misuses your credit card.
Punch your credit card number into the keypad.
Now he needs only two credit hours to graduate.
The chief protagonists in the row are Visa and Mastercard, the world's leading credit card brands.
New consumer credit fell to $3.7 billion in August.
You must buy the credit life insurance before you can buy the disability insurance.
Don't let credit tempt you to buy something you can't afford.
be in credit
(of an account) have money in it
credit where credit is due
praise given when it is deserved, even if one is reluctant to give it
do someone credit (或 do credit to someone)
make someone worthy of praise or respect
your concern does you credit.
give someone credit for
commend someone for (a quality or achievement), especially with reluctance or surprise
please give me credit for some sense.
have something to one's credit
have achieved something notable
he has 65 Tournament wins to his credit.
on credit
with an arrangement to pay later
on the credit side
as a good aspect of the situation
on the credit side, the text is highly readable.
to one's credit
used to indicate that something praiseworthy has been achieved, especially despite difficulties
to their credit, both sides managed to overcome the elements and produce an exciting match.
belief, faith, confidence, conviction, credit, trust
Es gibt relativ wenig Informationen über credit. Vielleicht können Sie sich eine zweisprachige Geschichte ansehen, um Ihre Stimmung zu entspannen. Ich wünsche Ihnen einen schönen Tag!
Wörter, die mit Buchstabe C beginnen
Wörter, die mit Buchstabe E beginnen
Wörter, die mit Buchstabe K beginnen