crédit - significado y definición. Qué es crédit
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Qué (quién) es crédit - definición

LOAN
Consumer Credit; Consumer lending; Lending industry; Consumer credit; Consumer loan; Credited; Crediting; Bank credit; Credit (economics); Consumer-loan company; Credit supply; Credit (song); Credit (finance)
  • Domestic credit to private sector in 2005
  • A [[credit card]] is a common form of credit. With a credit card, the credit card company, often a [[bank]], grants a [[line of credit]] to the card holder. The card holder can make purchases from merchants, and borrow the money for these purchases from the credit card company.

credit         
(credits, crediting, credited)
Frequency: The word is one of the 1500 most common words in English.
1.
If you are allowed credit, you are allowed to pay for goods or services several weeks or months after you have received them.
The group can't get credit to buy farming machinery...
You can ask a dealer for a discount whether you pay cash or buy on credit.
N-UNCOUNT: oft on N
2.
If someone or their bank account is in credit, their bank account has money in it. (mainly BRIT)
The idea that I could be charged when I'm in credit makes me very angry...
Interest is payable on credit balances.
N-UNCOUNT: in N, N n
3.
When a sum of money is credited to an account, the bank adds that sum of money to the total in the account.
She noticed that only $80,000 had been credited to her account...
Midland decided to change the way it credited payments to accounts...
Interest is calculated daily and credited once a year, on 1 April.
? debit
VERB: be V-ed to n, V n to n, be V-ed, also V n
4.
A credit is a sum of money which is added to an account.
The statement of total debits and credits is known as a balance.
? debit
N-COUNT
5.
A credit is an amount of money that is given to someone.
Senator Bill Bradley outlined his own tax cut, giving families $350 in tax credits per child...
= allowance
N-COUNT
6.
If you get the credit for something good, people praise you because you are responsible for it, or are thought to be responsible for it.
It would be wrong for us to take all the credit...
Some of the credit for her relaxed manner must go to Andy.
? blame
N-UNCOUNT: oft the N for n/-ing
7.
If people credit someone with an achievement or if it is credited to them, people say or believe that they were responsible for it.
The staff are crediting him with having saved Hythe's life...
The screenplay for 'Gabriel Over the White House' is credited to Carey Wilson.
VERB: V n with -ing/n, be V-ed to n, also V n to n
8.
If you credit someone with a quality, you believe or say that they have it.
I wonder why you can't credit him with the same generosity of spirit...
VERB: V n with n
9.
If you say that someone is a credit to someone or something, you mean that their qualities or achievements will make people have a good opinion of the person or thing mentioned.
He is one of the greatest British players of recent times and is a credit to his profession.
? disgrace
N-SING: a N to n
10.
The list of people who helped to make a film, a CD, or a television programme is called the credits.
N-COUNT: usu pl
11.
A credit is a successfully completed part of a higher education course. At some universities and colleges you need a certain number of credits to be awarded a degree.
N-COUNT
12.
If you say that something does someone credit, you mean that they should be praised or admired because of it.
You're a nice girl, Lettie, and your kind heart does you credit.
PHRASE: V inflects
13.
To give someone credit for a good quality means to believe that they have it.
Bratbakk had more ability than the media gave him credit for.
PHRASE: V inflects, PHR n
14.
You say on the credit side in order to introduce one or more good things about a situation or person, usually when you have already mentioned the bad things about them.
On the credit side, he's always been wonderful with his mother.
PHRASE: PHR with cl
15.
If something is to someone's credit, they deserve praise for it.
She had managed to pull herself together and, to her credit, continued to look upon life as a positive experience...
PHRASE: PHR with cl, it v-link PHR that
16.
If you already have one or more achievements to your credit, you have achieved them.
I have twenty novels and countless magazine stories to my credit.
PHRASE
Crediting         
·p.pr. & ·vb.n. of Credit.
Credit         
·vt To bring honor or repute upon; to do credit to; to raise the estimation of.
II. Credit ·noun Influence derived from the good opinion, confidence, or favor of others; interest.
III. Credit ·noun Reliance on the truth of something said or done; belief; faith; trust; confidence.
IV. Credit ·noun Reputation derived from the confidence of others; esteem; honor; good name; estimation.
V. Credit ·noun That which tends to procure, or add to, reputation or esteem; an Honor.
VI. Credit ·noun A ground of, or title to, belief or confidence; authority derived from character or reputation.
VII. Credit ·noun The time given for payment for lands or goods sold on trust; as, a long credit or a short credit.
VIII. Credit ·vt To confide in the truth of; to give credence to; to put trust in; to Believe.
IX. Credit ·vt To enter upon the credit side of an account; to give credit for; as, to credit the amount paid; to set to the credit of; as, to credit a man with the interest paid on a bond.
X. Credit ·noun Trust given or received; expectation of future playment for property transferred, or of fulfillment or promises given; mercantile reputation entitling one to be trusted;
- applied to individuals, corporations, communities, or nations; as, to buy goods on credit.
XI. Credit ·noun The side of an account on which are entered all items reckoned as values received from the party or the category named at the head of the account; also, any one, or the sum, of these items;
- the opposite of debit; as, this sum is carried to one's credit, and that to his debit; A has several credits on the books of B.

Wikipedia

Credit

Credit (from Latin verb credit, meaning "one believes") is the trust which allows one party to provide money or resources to another party wherein the second party does not reimburse the first party immediately (thereby generating a debt), but promises either to repay or return those resources (or other materials of equal value) at a later date. The resources provided by the first party can be either property, fulfillment of promises, or performances. In other words, credit is a method of making reciprocity formal, legally enforceable, and extensible to a large group of unrelated people.

The resources provided may be financial (e.g. granting a loan), or they may consist of goods or services (e.g. consumer credit). Credit encompasses any form of deferred payment. Credit is extended by a creditor, also known as a lender, to a debtor, also known as a borrower.

Ejemplos de uso de crédit
1. Crédit Agricole, which has owned a stake in Emporiki Bank of Greece SA since 2000, hopes the acquisition will expand its presence in the Balkans.
2. Last week, Crédit Agricole raised its cash offer from 23.5 euros ($30) to 25 euros ($31.80) per share.
3. Zabriskie kept the yellow jersey by two seconds over Armstrong, with Laszlo Bodrogi, a Hungarian with Crédit Agricole, in third place, 47 seconds behind the leader.
4. France‘s largest retail bank, Crédit Agricole, was hit by a 250 million Euro charge last year on a similar unauthorised trading position.
5. Alliance & Leicester fell 6% to 10.82 as Crédit Agricole – tipped as a bidder for the bank – launched a bid for the Greek bank Emporiki.