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词汇 credit
释义 credit
noun
uk /ˈkred.ɪt/ us /ˈkred.ɪt/

creditnoun (PRAISE)


B2[ U ]
praise, approval, or honour: 赞扬;赞许;荣誉
get credit for She got no credit for solving the problem.她没有因为解决了这一问题而得到任何赞许。
get the creditI do the work, and you get the credit — how is that fair?
take credit forHer boss took credit for it.
take the creditSo many people were involved in this, I can't take all of the credit.
give someone credit for something/doing somethingI gave him credit for (= thought that he would have) better judgment than he showed.我高估了他的判断力。
give someone the creditIf a member of my team comes up with a great idea, I'm happy to give them the credit.
 to someone's credit
used to say that someone should be praised for something, although there may be other things about them that are not good:
To his credit, he is honest about the problems the business faces.
 be a credit to someone/something
to do something that makes a person, group, or organization feel proud or receive praise: 是…的骄傲;是…的光荣
She is a credit to her family.她给家里带来了荣耀。
 someone does someone credit
someone has done well or behaved well in a way that means someone connected with them should receive praise:
She does her teachers credit.她给她的老师们增了光。
 something does someone credit
something should cause a person to receive praise:
Their actions do them credit.
 all credit to someone
used to show that you think a person deserves a lot of praise for something that they have done: …值得大加称赞
All credit to her, she did it all herself.她值得大加赞赏,这都是她一个人完成的。
We only deal with companies that have a good credit record.
He has a good credit history.
The government has imposed a sharp credit squeeze in an attempt to hold down inflation.为抑制通货膨胀,政府施行了严格的信贷紧缩政策。
We can get a year's interest-free credit on a sofa.
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

Praising and applauding
acclaim
acclamation
accolade
adulate
adulation
clap
compliment
encomium
enthrone
enthronement
eulogistic
eulogistically
laurel wreath
lay it on a bit thickidiom
ode
ooh
ooh and aahidiom
ovation
overpraise
puff

creditnoun (MONEY)


B1[ U ]
a method of paying for goods or services at a later time, usually paying interest as well as the original money: 赊购,赊账,信用贷款
on credit They decided to buy the car on credit.他们决定用赊购的方法买那辆汽车。
interest-free creditThe shop was offering six months' interest-free credit on electronic goods.这家店提供6个月期限的(免息)电器赊购服务。
Compare
debitnoun
[ U ]
the fact of being trusted to pay back money that you have borrowed:
I own a home and my credit is good, so why have I been refused a loan?
Banks typically charge customers with bad credit higher interest rates.
Identity thieves can steal your money and ruin your credit.
See also
credit history
credit rating
B1[ U ]
money in an account:
in credit I was relieved to see from my statement that my account was in credit.看到对账单上我的账户仍有存款,我松了一口气。
If the cardholder has enough credit in their account to cover the sale, the transaction is authorized.
[ C ]
an amount of money paid into an account:
The refund appeared will appear as a credit on your bill.
I phoned the bank when confusing debits and credits appeared on my bank statement.
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

Borrowing & lending
amortizable
amortization
amortize
bond measure
bond referendum
bonded
credit limit
debt
get behind
hole
lending rate
microcredit
microloan
non-current
non-interest
non-prime
outstanding
use something as collateral
usury
write something off

You can also find related words, phrases, and synonyms in the topics:


Paying money
Profits & losses

creditnoun (COURSE UNIT)


B2[ C ]
a unit that represents a successfully finished part of an educational course: 学分
Each of these classes is worth three credits.这些课程每门3个学分。
Synonym
academic credit
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

Classes & courses
academic year
access course
advanced
Advanced Placement
asynchronous
field trip
foundation course
grade retention
grind
homework
HyFlex
immersion course
non-class
non-degree
on a course
open admissions
the national curriculum
visual aid
work placement
workshop

creditnoun (LIST OF NAMES)


 the credits[ plural ]
a list of people who helped to make a film or a television or radio programme, that is shown or announced at the beginning or the end of it: (电影、电视或广播节目的)演职人员名单
Everyone in the cinema was in tears by the time the credits rolled.

Idioms


credit where credit is due
have something to your credit
credit
verb
uk /ˈkred.ɪt/ us /ˈkred.ɪt/

creditverb (PAY)


[ T ]
to pay money into a bank account: 给银行账户上存钱
credit something with somethingThey credited my account with $20 after I pointed out the mistake.我指出错误后,他们给我的账户上存入了20美元。
They've credited my account with another £100.
We'll credit you with the remaining amount next week.
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

Banks
anti-city
apex
bank
bank balance
bank manager
bank statement
banker
building society
cash
cash drawer
challenger bank
investment bank
lender
online banking
open an account
pay something in
pin
quantitative easing
the Bank of England
the Square Mile

creditverb (BELIEVE)


[ Tnot continuous ]
to believe something that seems unlikely to be true: 信任,相信(不大可能的事)
He even tried to pretend he was my son - can you credit it?他甚至试图假装自己是我儿子——你信吗?
it is hard to creditIt was hard to credit some of the stories we heard about her.我们听过一些有关她的故事,难以令人置信。
Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples

to believe someone or something
believeCan we believe a word of what this man says?
acceptMost people accept what the newspapers say as being correct.
creditUKIt’s hard to credit that she’s 87.
swallowI personally find it hard to swallow the official narrative.
buyWhen it comes to global warming, he doesn't buy it, and is out to discredit the whole theory.
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

Believing
accept
allegedly
article of faith
ascribe something to something
ascription
belief
delude
deluded
evidently
feel it in your bonesidiom
give credence to something
incline
put stock in somethingidiom
received
recognize
room
room for doubtidiom
see something in someone/something
swallow
swear

Phrasal verb


credit someone with something

credit | American Dictionary


credit
noun
us/ˈkred·ɪt/

creditnoun (PAYMENT LATER)


[ U ]
a method of buying goods or services that allows you to pay for them in the future:
We bought our sofa on credit.
The bank offers small businesses credit.

creditnoun (PRAISE)


[ C/U ]
praise or approval, esp. to recognize achievement:
[ U ]You have to give him credit for being so honest.
[ U ]How can he take credit for work he didn’t do?

creditnoun (MONEY AVAILABLE)


[ C/U ]
an amount of money available to you because you paid for something earlier, or a record of this money:
[ C ]We returned the clothes and got a store credit.
[ C/U ]
A credit is also an amount of money you do not have to pay:
[ C ]a tax credit

creditnoun (COURSE UNIT)


[ C ]
a unit of measurement of the value contributed by an educational course to a college degree:
Comparative religion is a three-credit course.

Idioms


a credit to someone/something
to someone’s credit
credit
verb[ T ]
us/ˈkred·ət/

creditverb[T] (BELIEVE)


to believe or trust something that may not be true:
If you can credit what the doctor says, the illness isn’t serious.

creditable


adjectiveus/ˈkred·ət̬·ə·bəl/
She gave a creditable performance of a woman in love.

Phrasal verb


credit someone with something

credit | Business English


credit
noun
uk /ˈkredɪt/us
[ U ] COMMERCE, FINANCE
a method of paying for goods or services at a later time, usually paying interest as well as the original amount:
give/extend/offer credit to sbU.S. banks are reluctant to extend credit to the troubled nation.
deny/refuse sb creditHave you ever been refused credit?
on creditThey've purchased all sorts of leisure equipment on credit.
The card has no annual fee and users get up to eight weeks' interest-free credit.
[ U ] FINANCE
the money lent by financial organizations to companies, governments, people, etc.:
domestic/foreign/international creditThe central bank attributed the rise in domestic credit during the period to a rise in private sector credit.
cheap/affordable/easy creditRising house prices were fueled by easy credit.
Agricultural borrowers are concerned about credit availability as the farm economy weakens.
[ U ] FINANCE
the amount of risk when lending money to a particular person or organization, based on how likely they are to pay it back:
weak/poor/bad creditToo many mortgages had been granted to home buyers with weak credit.
good creditThey will let you take the goods and pay later if your credit is good.
[ C ] BANKING
a payment of money into a bank account:
His bank statement shows two credits of $5000 each.
Compare
debitnoun
 in credit
BANKING UK
if a person or their bank account is in credit, there is money in the account:
As long as you stay in credit, there will be no charges for normal transactions on your account.
[ C ] ACCOUNTING (abbreviationCR)
an amount recorded on the right side of a company's financial accounts, which shows a decrease in assets or an increase in debt:
The accounting system automatically generates a credit to the account that was debited.
Compare
debitverb
[ C or S ] TAX
an amount by which someone is allowed to reduce the amount of tax they pay, because they have spent money on a particular thing:
He introduced a new tax break in the form of a child-care credit.
See also
tax credit
[ C or U ] ACCOUNTING, COMMERCE
an amount of money that you have available to spend with a store or business, for example, because you returned a product or paid too much for it:
If you are dissatisfied with any item, it may be returned within 14 days for credit, refund, or exchange.
[ U ]
praise for doing something good:
credit for sthThe whole team deserves credit for bringing the project in on time.
take (the) creditShe felt he had taken the credit for her idea.

See also


bank credit
bank giro credit
bilateral credit
carbon credit
confirmed letter of credit
consumer credit
deferred credit
documentary credit
emission credit
export credit
View all

extended credit
long-term credit
medium-term credit
pollution credit
revolving line of credit
secured credit
short-term credit
tax credit
trade credit
unsecured credit
credit
verb[ T ]
uk /ˈkredɪt/us
BANKING, FINANCE
to show that money has been added to something such as an account:
When dividends are received the shareholder's account will be credited.
credit sth with €10/€1000, etc.Within a week my card was credited with the $219 difference.
credit €10/€1000, etc. to sthThe bank mistakenly credited almost $1 million to his account.
ACCOUNTING
to record an amount on the right side of a company's financial accounts to show a decrease in assets or an increase in debt:
credit sth to sthA fair amount should be periodically credited to 'reserve' for depreciation.

Examples of credit


credit
Tax credits have become a convenient vehicle for economic stimulation of targeted sectors and are far more acceptable politically than tax increases.
If they are doing well its own perfor mance should be partly discounted but if they are doing badly it is credited accordingly.
By engaging my commentary, he implicitly credits it as worthy of thoughtful reply.
Perhaps he felt that the allegation would not be credited, but that seems unlikely.
Each query is associated to an initial number of credits defined in the #credits parameter.
The factor income deficit (mainly onerous interests on shortterm credits and to some degree profit remittances) is growing although not alarming so far.
What, however, should people receive tax credits for doing?
Recent reforms to maternity allowances have equally credited in low earners (albeit with different rules).
If funds did not report option weights, then a simple average of crediting rates is reported.
In a pension equity plan, by contrast, there are no interest credits.
Moreover, sometimes the sources of the recorded vocal sounds are credited in the sleeve notes.
A preschool child does not choose to study another language because it would be interesting to do so, or would give her academic credits.
By definition, if one reporter disagrees with another, the same child is credited with different levels of knowledge of particular items.
To be credited with the subject, no constituent other than the subject was necessary.
Even a decision to distrust it can only be taken by reference to a repertoire of experiences that are credited.
See all examples of credit
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.

Collocations withcredit


credit

These are words often used in combination with credit.

Click on a collocation to see more examples of it.


academic credit
Academic validation would advise on the best way of fulfilling the learning plan and provide the appropriate accreditation so that the staff nurses gain academiccredit for their learning.
agricultural credit
They will also benefit from the help we are giving for agriculturalcredit.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
cheap credit
Employers have not been enthusiastic because of the loss of the cheapcredit source.
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
See all collocations with credit
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