accrue
verbEtymology
First attested in mid 15th century. From Middle English acrewen, borrowed from Old French acreüe, past participle of accreistre (“to increase”), from Latin accrēsco (“increase”), from ad (“in addition”) + crēscō (“to grow”). Compare accrete.
Definitions
To increase, to rise
- And though pow’r fail’d, her Courage did accrue
To reach or come to by way of increase
To reach or come to by way of increase; to arise or spring up because of growth or result, especially as the produce of money lent.
- Environmental benefits that accrue to the area.
- 1879, Benjamin Vaughan Abbott, Dictionary of Terms and Phrases used in American or English Jurisprudence: ACCRUE Interest accrues to principal.
- The great and essential advantages accruing to society from the freedom of the press
To be incurred as a result of the passage of time.
- The monthly financial statements show all the actual but only some of the accrued expenses.
›+ 3 more definitionsshow fewer
To accumulate.
- He has accrued nine sick days.
- We, who are dead and gone, shall bear no Part, In all the Pleasures, no shall we feel the smart, Which to that other Mortal shall accrew, Whom of our Matter Time shall mould anew.
To become an enforceable and permanent right.
Something that accrues
Something that accrues; advantage accruing
The neighborhood
- synonymaccrete
- synonymincrease
- synonymaccumulate
- antonymamortizeantonym(s) of “accounting”
- antonymdeferantonym(s) of “accounting”
- antonymprepayantonym(s) of “accounting”
- neighboraccretion
- neighboraccresce
- neighboraccrete
- neighborcrescent
Derived
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for accrue. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA