Dictionary
be accrued
verb
To increase, to augment; to come to by way of increase; to arise or spring as a growth or result; to be added as increase, profit, or damage, especially as the produce of money lent.
synonyms
Exact(60)
No more rights can be accrued.
Kill prizes loyalty, which he believes is inherent, more than acumen, which can be accrued.
These include posting "speed limits in hallways" and "preparing for vacation time to be accrued in nanoseconds".
There's no official limit on the amount of rewards that can be accrued, either on a yearly or lifetime basis.
The automaker said it expected the balance, primarily related to programs to reduce salaried jobs, to be accrued in the first quarter of 2007.
If fighting terrorism has costs, those can and should be accrued on the convenience for law enforcement side of the ledger, rather than by sacrificing who we are.
The government statement concluded, though, that Millennium no longer exists and that the $26 million dollars, plus an additional $11 million estimated to be accrued interest, was gone.
There's so much information available to be accrued on our own specialist subject, be it Aston Villa or archery, that our leisure pursuit becomes a full-time occupation.
"Comps," like free hotel rooms, show tickets and meals, would be accrued from online play, but would have to be redeemed in person at a casino.
Initially, 16 patients were to be accrued.
It has been suggested that health benefits from physical activity may be accrued through active commuting to school.
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