词汇 | example_english_credit |
释义 | Examples of creditThese 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. 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. However, a selected group of large enterprises were exempted from these standards, and provided with fiscal subsidies and soft credits from the state banks. Potatoes and silage corn both received manure-nutrient credits. Nunns credits his ability to fit with live performer and instruments in various styles to his years of improvisation. In general, all qualified employees are included in the pension plan and receive credits to their account each pay period. He credited the elimination of the poll tax as a major contribution to this surprising result. Commercial banks, in turn, advance short-term credits, matching the shortest term of their liabilities. However, returns to individual accounts are credited on a net-of-costs basis. One solution to these interlocking problems is to put a chunk of credits at the beginning. Similarly, ecosystem services, such as the buying and selling of carbon credits, are potential agricultural products68. Profitability may also be improved by lower fertilizer costs if nutrient credits are taken for applied manure. The "necessary evils" of social purity and censorship must be credited in part for our perception of individual writers and their literary legacy. Table 3 presents the proportion of people in mid-life with any state pension entitlements accrued through either contributions or credits by age and caring status. Half of the available credits are awarded for the course modules, and half for the research project. The second type of rule compensates for caring activities and includes such provisions as credits and home responsibility payments for periods of care. Tax relief policies can benefit family care-givers in the form of tax credits, refundable or non-refundable, or by increasing exemptions or allowances from taxable income. Because of the lack of transparency and accountability, the money credited to the pension schemes has been misused. In order to gain experience in more building phases, students are recommended to stay for two semesters, and they receive correspondingly more credits. He credited some of these developments to the two condemned men. When the weavers returned the cloth, they would be credited with an amount similarly exaggerated, thus erasing the yarn debt on paper. One interpretation is that two-year-olds have more verb-general knowledge than they have previously been credited with. At this point they can be credited with understanding the distinction between said and meant ; between text and interpretation. Manure-nutrient credits were reductions in fertilizer use from manure only and not from crops grown previously in the rotation. Both conversions released billions which were credited to the budget. Participants were credited with one point for each digit in the longest sequence accurately recalled. Open access prevailed, soft credits were offered and overcapitalisation quickly resulted. A complete simulation has been performed for each value of #credits varying in the range [12-24] with an increment of 4 credits. As one of the two 'dimensions' of cross-curricular education, multiculturalism is credited with being at the core of a successful curriculum. The financial security of those who undertake unpaid caring work could be improved both by more adequate benefits and more comprehensive pension credits. If a verbal stem is used in a given sample, it is credited to the child's vocabulary from then on. He is credited with kindness of heart and an unselfish disposition, but it is difficult to find more than the courtesy of the coldblooded. However, the beneficiaries of market-oriented policies have credited their implementation to the preceding military regime. Banks were also opened which provided credits for the construction of infrastructure, such as irrigation, reservoirs and wells. To assess the value of benefits under the hybrid plan, we must specify the interest rate credits applied to participant balances. Less than 2 % of total credits allocated in 2003 go to the agricultural sector. He can be credited with being the first writer known to verbalize the concept of diaphragm breathing, which is crucial to the art of singing. In voluntary and public sector payment programs, credits for emission reductions from sequestration in general, and soil carbon sequestration specifically, are more commonly found. The researcher then hopes that the results of the twin experiments dovetail nicely, allowing for interpretations that can be credited with both reliability and validity. The opening credits set all this up nicely. The bulk consisted of urban property, credits, titles of public debt and, of course, of®ces. The credits on the cover of this disc permit his name to enter the composer roster of record catalogues. His bulletins from the front, describing the atrocious conditions there, were widely credited with prompting action at home. A cash balance plan can be structured to increase accruals with age or service by giving larger credits as age or service increases. While big men were credited with the ability to extract strong medicines from the wilderness, they did not have exclusive control of such resources. However, several non-market features still affect the behaviour of smallholders, such as availability of rural credits, access to roads and the efficiency of distribution networks. In its place, he would provide federal tax credits of $2,500 per individual and $5,000 per family to purchase health insurance. We propose an alternative to the existing patent system, instead rewarding the innovating firm with direct tax credits in exchange for marginal cost pricing. Technical aid and guaranteed export credits were not affected by the withdrawal of aid. In this case, credits are assigned starting from the semantic neighbors with the higher ranking value. Payment uncertainty associated with promissory notes (or trade credits) plays a central role in the disruption of the division of labor in this model. Beginning in 1990, the private sector received 13 per cent of all bank credits, a massive increase due to the reform of the banking system. To be credited with the verb, the child did not have to produce any constituent other than the verb. To be credited with the object, no target item other than the object was necessary. Only two were credited with professional or technical qualifications (table 4). In the long term if manure nutrient credits were taken, average gains were an additional $106 per hectare. She is credited with hundreds of songs in his praise. Funds not reporting any crediting rates were omitted. To get a full rate of benefit, contributions must have been paid or credited for 90% of working life. Course credits were given to normal trichromat subjects. The older freelancers involved in this study were experienced media professionals with many credits to their name. Any data cited from a source where no independent verification was made or could be made are credited to that source. The practice of co-operation thus became confined to ad hoc, individually organised, actions securing short-term credits for stabilising central banks. He keeps a proof sheet for small credits, recorded in such a way that only he understands them. The government also made a number of economic misjudgements, including over-extending foreign credits and buying and keeping sterling. Even after these credits have been taken into account, the average entitlement increased to just 42 per cent. In it, the problem is presented immediately as the credits are rolling. Practically, there may be under-the-counter deals that allow the investor to acquire these credits at a price below their market value. The projects did not generate any emissions credits. Having said this, the editors must be credited for compiling a collection of high-quality studies dealing with a wide range of functionally driven factors. A smaller multiplier could be applied to tax credits for incremental innovations. If authorized by law, these sums are credited directly to specific appropriation and fund accounts. However, he credits this school with addressing the right question: what is the relation between morphological sound and meaning? Individual item charges were then credited to the specific brain death stay period as described above. First, with no credits, the farmer smoothes consumption over time by adjusting forest clearing labor unless land selling is available as an alternative disinvestment. Such credits can alter the distributional impact of a higher tax level and so reduce concern about the financial impact of taxes. The distributional impacts of pollution taxes or trading, which are usually thought to favor trading, can be made equal through the use of tax credits. Students received credits or were paid for participation. All these credits were subject to interest at commercial rates and were payable over a maximum of five years. She is also credited with nurturing aspects, though these attributes are not always at the forefront of her character. They came to dominate education and were credited with doing much to push the frontiers of western pedagogy in their efforts to propagate their faith. If merchants or farmers could not work out income and expenditure, credits and debits, then their businesses would struggle. In order to democratise this perspective every service user has to be credited with an equal voice. Any remaining errors must, of course, be credited to me. Their day-labourers benefited from agrarian reform but became dependent on governmental administration and credits. Particularly in the case of imports, which are sold commonly on long term credits six months and sometimes more. 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. |
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