credit an account with an amount

  • 1credit — cred·it 1 n 1: recognition see also full faith and credit 2 a: the balance in an account which may be drawn upon and repaid later compare loan …

    Law dictionary

  • 2Credit card — Personal finance Credit and debt Pawnbroker Student loan Employment contract Salary Wage Empl …

    Wikipedia

  • 3credit — 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

  • 4credit — I n. time given for payment 1) to allow, give, extend, offer credit (this store does not give credit) 2) to deny, refuse smb. credit 3) consumer credit 4) on credit (to buy smt. on credit) recognition honor 5) to do credit to; to reflect credit… …

    Combinatory dictionary

  • 5credit — 01. He buys everything on [credit]; he never pays cash for anything. 02. We have to give her a lot of [credit] for our success. 03. My wife can t get [credit] from the bank because she is self employed and, as such, is considered too much of a… …

    Grammatical examples in English

  • 6credit — / kredɪt/ noun 1. a period of time allowed before a customer has to pay a debt incurred for goods or services ● to give someone six months’ credit ● to sell on good credit terms ♦ on credit without paying immediately ● to live on credit ● We buy… …

    Dictionary of banking and finance

  • 7credit — 1. verb /kɹɛdɪt/ a) To believe. Someone said there had been over 100,000 people there, but I cant credit that. b) To add to an account (confer debit.) Credit accounts receivable with the amount of the invoice. See Also: credible …

    Wiktionary

  • 8Credit counseling — (known in the United Kingdom as debt counseling) is a process that involves offering education to consumers about how to avoid incurring debts that cannot be repaid through establishing an effective Debt Management Plan and Budget. Credit… …

    Wikipedia

  • 9Credit rating — of governments around the world by Standard Poor s:   AAA …

    Wikipedia

  • 10Credit card hijacking — is a form of credit card fraud and the term is used when a person’s credit card is used by some unauthorized person (e.g. a thief or overaggressive vendor) to buy goods or services. The credit card owner usually has trouble reasserting control… …

    Wikipedia