Online Google Dictionary

accrue 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/əˈkro͞o/,
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accrues, 3rd person singular present; accrued, past tense; accrued, past participle; accruing, present participle;
  1. (of sums of money or benefits) Be received by someone in regular or increasing amounts over time
    • - financial benefits will accrue from restructuring
    • - the accrued interest
  2. Accumulate or receive (such payments or benefits)

  3. Make provision for (a charge) at the end of a financial period for work that has been done but not yet invoiced


  1. grow by addition; "The interest accrues"
  2. come into the possession of; "The house accrued to the oldest son"
  3. (accrued) periodically accumulated over time; "accrued interest"; "accrued leave"
  4. (accrual) accumulation: the act of accumulating
  5. Accrual (accumulation) of something is, in finance, the adding together of interest or different investments over a period of time. ...
  6. Something that accrues; advantage accruing; To increase, to augment; to come to by way of increase; to arise or spring as a growth or result; to be added as increase, profit, or damage, especially as the produce of money lent; To be incurred as a result of the passage of time
  7. (accrual) An increase; something that accumulates, especially an amount of money that periodically accumulates for a specific purpose; a charge incurred in one accounting period that has not been paid by the end of it
  8. (ACCRUED) An adjective describing something that has come into existence but has not yet been claimed by or distributed to its rightful owner.
  9. (Accrued) Items/expenses that accumulate over time but normally still need to be paid. The most common example is property taxes expenses. You "accrue" taxes each month, but typically pay the entire bill at the end of the tax year.
  10. (Accrued) On a closing statement, items of expense that are incurred but not yet payable, such as interest on a mortgage loan or taxes on real property.
  11. (Accrued) to record on an organization's books according to when a transaction occurred rather than when the related cash payment was made; e.g. John earned $1,000 in salary during December, 1997 but was not paid such amount until 1/10/98. ...
  12. (accrued) interest you have earned or incurred that is yet to be paid or charged.
  13. (Accrual) The recognition of when expenses when incurred or revenue when earned or regardless of when the actual cash is received or paid.
  14. (Accrual) The apportionment of premiums and discounts on forward exchange transactions that relate directly to deposit swap (Interest Arbitrage) deals , over the period of each deal.
  15. (Accrual) Recognition of assets, expenses, liabilities or revenues after the cash value has been determined but before it’s been transferred.
  16. (Accrual) The amount of money that is set aside to cover expenses. The accrual is the plan's best estimate of what those expenses are, and (for medical expenses) is based on a combination of data from the authorization system, the claims system, lag studies, and the plan's prior history.
  17. (Accrual) Sum of child support payments that are due or overdue.
  18. (Accrual) The accounting basis that brings items to account as they are earned or incurred (and not as cash received or paid) and includes them in financial statements in the related accounting period.
  19. (Accrual) Item on a 'Balance Sheet' which is charged against Current Profit but not yet paid. Accruals include invoices for which payment has not yet been received or purchases that have not yet been paid.
  20. (ACCRUAL) The accounting treatment of a transaction completed after the close of an accounting period where all or part of the transaction relates to that accounting period. Such a transaction is brought into account by "accruing"
  21. (Accrual (Accounting or GL)) When referring to general ledgers (GLs), an accrual tries to account for a period of time that has not yet happened, or been processed. ...
  22. (Accrual) A payment incurred in one period, but not paid until the next.
  23. (Accrual) Accruals accounting is a way of accounting for something before it has necessarily happened. For example, you may want to finish off your books for the month but you know that you have one more expense to come through for the month that you haven’t paid for yet. ...
  24. (Accrual) Adjustment made at the end of an accounting period to recognise expenses that have been incurred during the period but for which no invoice has yet been received
  25. (Accrual) An accounting term for the increase over time of expenses incurred by your business. They are accrued up until the time they are paid.