ac·count ( -kount )n.1. A narrative or record of events. 2. a. A reason given for a particular action or event: What is the account for this loss? b. A report relating to one's conduct: gave a satisfactory account of herself. c. A basis or ground: no reason to worry on that account. 3. Abbr. a/c or acct.a. A formal banking, brokerage, or business relationship established to provide for regular services, dealings, and other financial transactions. b. A precise list or enumeration of financial transactions. c. Money deposited for checking, savings, or brokerage use. d. A customer having a business or credit relationship with a firm: salespeople visiting their accounts. 4. Worth, standing, or importance: a landowner of some account. 5. Profit or advantage: turned her writing skills to good account. tr.v. ac·count·ed, ac·count·ing, ac·counts To consider as being; deem. See Synonyms at consider. See Usage Note at as1. Phrasal Verb: account for1. To constitute the governing or primary factor in: Bad weather accounted for the long delay. 2. To provide an explanation or justification for: The suspect couldn't account for his time that night. Idioms: call to account1. To challenge or contest. 2. To hold answerable for. on account of Because of; for the sake of: "We got married on account of the baby" Anne Tyler. on no account Under no circumstances. on (one's) own account1. For oneself. 2. On one's own; by oneself: He wants to work on his own account. take into account To take into consideration; allow for.
[Middle English, from Old French acont, from aconter, to reckon : a-, to (from Latin ad-; see ad-) + cunter, to count (from Latin comput re, to sum up; see compute).] |
account Noun 1. a report or description 2. a person's money held in a bank 3. a statement of financial transactions with the resulting balance 4. part or behalf: I am sorry that you suffered on my account 5. call someone to account to demand an explanation from someone 6. give a good or bad account of oneself to perform well or fail to perform well 7. of no account of little importance or value 8. on account of because of 9. take account of or take into account to take into consideration; allow for Verb to consider as: the evening was accounted a major step forward by all concerned [Old French acont]
ThesaurusLegend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms | Noun | 1. | account - a record or narrative description of past events; "a history of France"; "he gave an inaccurate account of the plot to kill the president"; "the story of exposure to lead"history - the discipline that records and interprets past events involving human beings; "he teaches Medieval history"; "history takes the long view" case history - detailed record of the background of a person or group under study or treatment record - anything (such as a document or a phonograph record or a photograph) providing permanent evidence of or information about past events; "the film provided a valuable record of stage techniques" recital - a detailed account or description of something; "he was forced to listen to a recital of his many shortcomings" | | 2. | account - a short account of the news; "the report of his speech"; "the story was on the 11 o'clock news"; "the account of his speech that was given on the evening news made the governor furious"news - information reported in a newspaper or news magazine; "the news of my death was greatly exaggerated" newsletter, newssheet - report or open letter giving informal or confidential news of interest to a special group bulletin - a brief report (especially an official statement issued for immediate publication or broadcast) urban legend - a story that appears mysteriously and spreads spontaneously in various forms and is usually false; contains elements of humor or horror and is popularly believed to be true exclusive, scoop - a news report that is reported first by one news organization; "he got a scoop on the bribery of city officials" | | 3. | account - a formal contractual relationship established to provide for regular banking or brokerage or business services; "he asked to see the executive who handled his account"brokerage account - a fund that a customer has entrusted to a securities brokerage; "you can't get a brokerage account unless you have $20,000" bank account - a fund that a customer has entrusted to a bank and from which the customer can make withdrawals; "he moved his bank account to a new bank" relationship - a state involving mutual dealings between people or parties or countries short account - a brokerage account of someone who sells short (sells securities he does not own) | | 4. | account - a statement that makes something comprehensible by describing the relevant structure or operation or circumstances etc.; "the explanation was very simple"; "I expected a brief account"statement - a message that is stated or declared; a communication (oral or written) setting forth particulars or facts etc; "according to his statement he was in London on that day" explanans - (logic) statements that explain the explicandum; the explanatory premises simplification - an explanation that omits superfluous details and reduces complexity accounting - a convincing explanation that reveals basic causes; "he was unable to give a clear accounting for his actions" reason - an explanation of the cause of some phenomenon; "the reason a steady state was never reached was that the back pressure built up too slowly" justification - a statement in explanation of some action or belief exposition - an account that sets forth the meaning or intent of a writing or discourse; "we would have understood the play better if there had been some initial exposition of the background" explication - a detailed explanation of the meaning of something gloss, rubric - an explanation or definition of an obscure word in a text definition - a concise explanation of the meaning of a word or phrase or symbol interpretation - an explanation that results from interpreting something; "the report included his interpretation of the forensic evidence" walk-through - a thorough explanation (usually accompanied by a demonstration) of each step in a procedure or process; "she gave me a walk-through of my new duties" | | 5. | account - grounds; "don't do it on my account"; "the paper was rejected on account of its length"; "he tried to blame the victim but his success on that score was doubtful"reason, ground - a rational motive for a belief or action; "the reason that war was declared"; "the grounds for their declaration" | | 6. | account - importance or value; "a person of considerable account"; "he predicted that although it is of small account now it will rapidly increase in importance"importance - the quality of being important and worthy of note; "the importance of a well-balanced diet" | | 7. | account - a statement of recent transactions and the resulting balance; "they send me an accounting every month"capital account - (finance) an account of the net value of a business at a specified date capital account - (economics) that part of the balance of payments recording a nation's outflow and inflow of financial securities suspense account - an account used temporarily to carry doubtful receipts and disbursements or discrepancies pending their analysis and permanent classification balance - equality between the totals of the credit and debit sides of an account | | 8. | account - the act of informing by verbal report; "he heard reports that they were causing trouble"; "by all accounts they were a happy couple"indirect discourse - a report of a discourse in which deictic terms are modified appropriately (e.g., "he said `I am a fool' would be modified to `he said he is a fool'") megillah - (Yiddish) a long boring tediously detailed account; "he insisted on giving us the whole megillah" anecdote - short account of an incident (especially a biographical one) recital, yarn, narration - the act of giving an account describing incidents or a course of events; "his narration was hesitant" scuttlebutt, gossip, comment - a report (often malicious) about the behavior of other people; "the divorce caused much gossip" | | 9. | account - an itemized statement of money owed for goods shipped or services rendered; "he paid his bill and left"; "send me an account of what I owe"hotel bill - statement of charges for staying in a hotel tab, chit, check - the bill in a restaurant; "he asked the waiter for the check" | | 10. | account - the quality of taking advantage; "she turned her writing skills to good account"gain, profit - the advantageous quality of being beneficial | | Verb | 1. | account - be the sole or primary factor in the existence, acquisition, supply, or disposal of something; "Passing grades account for half of the grades given in this exam"be - have the quality of being; (copula, used with an adjective or a predicate noun); "John is rich"; "This is not a good answer" | | 2. | account - keep an account ofcredit - accounting: enter as credit; "We credit your account with $100" balance - compute credits and debits of an account overbalance - cause to be off balance; "It is not desirable to overbalance the budget" compound - calculate principal and interest bill, charge - demand payment; "Will I get charged for this service?"; "We were billed for 4 nights in the hotel, although we stayed only 3 nights" | | 3. | account - to give an account or representation of in words; "Discreet Italian police described it in a manner typically continental"inform - impart knowledge of some fact, state or affairs, or event to; "I informed him of his rights" | | 4. | account - furnish a justifying analysis or explanation; "I can't account for the missing money"declare - state emphatically and authoritatively; "He declared that he needed more money to carry out the task he was charged with" |
account noun 1. description, report, record, story, history, detail, statement, relation, version, tale, explanation, narrative, chronicle, portrayal, recital, depiction, narration noun 2. importance, standing, concern, value, note, benefit, use, profit, worth, weight, advantage, rank, import, honour, consequence, substance, merit, significance, distinction, esteem, usefulness, repute, momentousness verb 4. consider, rate, value, judge, estimate, think, hold, believe, count, reckon, assess, weigh, calculate, esteem, deem, compute, gauge, appraise, regard as account for something 2. explain, excuse, justify, clarify, give a reason for, give an explanation for, illuminate, clear up, answer for, rationalize, elucidate
Translations account [əˈkaunt] n ( COMM) → cuenta, factura (= report); informe m; accounts npl (COMM) → cuentas fpl; to take into account, take account of → tener en cuenta; account for vt fus (= explain) → explicar; all the children were accounted for → no faltaba ningún niño
account [əˈkaunt] n ( Comm) → compte m (= report); compte rendu, récit m; "account payee only" ( Brit) → "chèque non endossable"; to keep an account of → noter; on account of → à cause de; to take into account, take account of → tenir compte deall the children were accounted for → aucun enfant ne manquait; four people are still not accounted for → on n'a toujours pas retrouvé quatre personnes
account [əˈkaunt] n ( Comm) ( bill) → Rechnung f; ( in bank, department store) → Konto nt; accounts npl (Comm) → Buchhaltung f; (Bookkeeping) → (Geschäfts)bücher pl; all the children were accounted for account → man wusste, wo alle Kinder waren;
account [əˈkaunt] n ( COMM) → conto (= report); descrizione f; accounts npl (COMM) → conti; "account payee only" ( BRIT) → "assegno non trasferibile"; to keep an account of → tenere nota di; to bring sb to account for sth/for having done sth → chiedere a qn di render conto di qc/per aver fatto qc; on account of → a causa di; to take into account, take account of → tener conto di
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