accredit
verb /əˈkredɪt/
/əˈkredɪt/
动词形式
present simple I / you / we / they accredit | /əˈkredɪt/ /əˈkredɪt/ |
he / she / it accredits | /əˈkredɪts/ /əˈkredɪts/ |
past simple accredited | /əˈkredɪtɪd/ /əˈkredɪtɪd/ |
past participle accredited | /əˈkredɪtɪd/ /əˈkredɪtɪd/ |
-ing form accrediting | /əˈkredɪtɪŋ/ /əˈkredɪtɪŋ/ |
- [usually passive] (formal) to believe that somebody is responsible for doing or saying something
把…归于;认为(某事为某人所说、所做) - be accredited to somebody The discovery of distillation is usually accredited to the Arabs of the 11th century.
通常认为,蒸馏法是阿拉伯人在 11 世纪发明的。 - be accredited with something The Arabs are usually accredited with the discovery of distillation.
通常认为,阿拉伯人发明了蒸馏法。 - She is accredited with having first introduced the word into the language.
她被认为是第一个将这个词引入该语言的人。
- be accredited to somebody The discovery of distillation is usually accredited to the Arabs of the 11th century.
- [usually passive] (specialist) to choose somebody for an official position, especially as an ambassador
委任,委派(某人为大使等) - be accredited to… He was accredited to Madrid.
他被委任为驻马德里大使。
- be accredited to… He was accredited to Madrid.
- accredit something/somebody to officially approve something/somebody as being of an accepted quality or standard
正式认可 - Institutions that do not meet the standards will not be accredited for teacher training.
没有达标的机构不会获得教师培训的资格。
- Institutions that do not meet the standards will not be accredited for teacher training.
词源early 17th cent. (in sense (3)): from French accréditer, from a- (from Latin ad ‘to, at’) + crédit ‘credit’.