Grant
Sorunu sor hemen cevaplansın.
grant teriminin İngilizce Türkçe sözlükte anlamı
- bağışlamak {f}
- bağış {i}
Örnek Cümle:
Bağışlanan hiçbir şeyi kabul etmemeliyiz.
-We must not take anything for granted.
- hibe {i}
Örnek Cümle:
Onun projesi hibeler tarafından finanse edildi.
-His project was funded by grants.
Örnek Cümle:
Bu öğrenim hibesi bana bölüm konseyi tarafından verildi.
-This study grant was given to me by the departmental council.
- hibe etmek
- burs
Örnek Cümle:
Üniversite ona bir burs verdi.
-The college granted him a scholarship.
- vermek {f}
- ödenek {i}
- onaylamak {f}
- imtiyaz {i}
- kabul etmek; rıza göstermek; yerine getirmek: She granted his request. Ricasını yerine getirdi. Granting the truth of what you're
- kabul etmek {f}
- varsaymak
- ver {f}
Örnek Cümle:
Bize bu koyda özel balık tutma izni verildi.
-We were granted the privilege of fishing in this bay.
Örnek Cümle:
Lincoln kölelere özgürlük verdi.
-Lincoln granted liberty to slaves.
- bahşetmek
- tahsisat
- farzetmek
- terketmek
- feragatname {i}
- burs vermek {f}
- teslim etmek
- ferağ etmek
- tasdik etmek
- devir {i}
- nasip {i}
- take for granted olmuş gibi kabul
- nasip etmek {f}
- 1. kabul etmek; rıza göstermek; yerine getirmek: She granted his request. Ricasını yerine getirdi. Granting the truth of what you're {f}
- bağış,v.ver: n.burs
- bahşetme (Hukuk)
- devretmek
- tevcih (Osmanlıca)
- tahsis (Kanun)
- yerine getirmek
- temlik (Ticaret)
- itiraf etmek
- hibe yardımı (Politika, Siyaset)
- ferağ
- verme (Hukuk)
Örnek Cümle:
Grant onlara sağlam bir söz vermeyi reddetti.
-Grant refused to give them a firm promise.
Örnek Cümle:
Bana katılmayacağına hiç ihtimal vermemiştim.
-I took it for granted that she would agree with me.
- grant in aid
- yardım bağışı
- grant-in-aid
- devlet yardımı
- grant-in-aid
- ödenek
- grant application
- Hibe başvuru
- grant for
- Hibe için
- grant in aid
- yardım baışı
- grant subsidies
- hibe sübvansiyonlar
- grant a request
- bir ricayı kabul etmek
- grant aid trainees
- (Askeri) BAĞIŞ, HİBE YARDIMI EĞİTİM PERSONELİ: Bak. "military assistance grant aid trainees"
- grant bail
- kefaletle serbest bırakmak
- grant bail
- kefaleti kabul etmek
- grant in aid
- devlet yardımı
- grant in aid
- ödenek
- grant list
- İzin Listesi
- grant s.o. bail
- birini kefaletle/kefaleten tahliye etmek
- granted
- verilmis
- space-grant
- (yeri, arazisi) bağışlanmış
- granted
- imtiyazlı
- granted
- varsayarak
- grants
- yardımlar
Mevcut yardımlar var.
-There are grants available.
- grants
- burslar
- grant to
- (Politika, Siyaset) hibe
- granted
- (Bilgisayar) verildi">(Bilgisayar) verildi
- granted
- cevaben evet
- granted
- varsayarsak
- granter
- (Kanun,Ticaret) veren
- granter
- (Kanun) devreden">(Kanun) devreden
- grantor
- (Kanun) devreden">(Kanun) devreden
- grantor
- (Kanun,Ticaret) hibe eden
- lump sum grant
- (Ticaret) götürü bağış
- Granted
- (cevaben) Evet
- death grant
- cenaze yardımı
- granting
- {f} bağışla
- achievement grant
- başarı bursu
- capital grant
- proje yardımı
- give/grant so. credit
- / So hibe veriyoruz. kredi
- granted
- ver
Bana katılmayacağına hiç ihtimal vermemiştim.
-I took it for granted that she would agree with me.
Lincoln kölelere özgürlük verdi.
-Lincoln granted liberty to slaves.
- granting
- verilme
- granting
- bağışlayarak
- maintenance grant
- okuma yardımı
- maintenance grant
- burs
- maintenance grant
- eğitim desteği
- may grant the title
- sıfatını bahşetsin
- mobility grant
- Hareketlilik ödeneği
- pell grant
- paldır hibe
- state grant
- devlet bursu
Danish students are demonstrating against proposals to cut the period of university state grants from six to four years.
- capitation grant
- kişi başına yapılan yardım
- government grant
- sübvansiyon
- government grant
- devlet desteği
- grantable
- hibe edilebilir
- granted
- diyelim ki
Diyelim ki, televizyon seyretmek dinlendirici olabilir.
-Granted, watching TV can be relaxing.
- granting
- (Hukuk) izin verme
- grantor
- burs veren kuruluş
- grantor
- bağış yapan kimse
- grantor
- hibe eden kimse
- grants
- ödenekler
- land grant
- hükümet tarafından okul binası yapımı gibi işler için verilen toprak
- land grant railroad
- (Askeri) ARAZİSİ BAĞIŞLANMIŞ DEMİRYOLU: Hükümetçe yapılmış arazi bağışları ile inşa edilen demiryolu. Bu yardıma karşılık olarak, Demiryolları İdaresi de, hükümete ait nakliyatta indirimli tarife uygular
- military assistance grant aid training
- (Askeri) ASKERİ YARDIM PROGRAMI BAĞIŞ YARDIM EĞİTİMİ: Askeri Yardım Programı Bağış Yardımına uygun olarak temin edilen eğitim
- military assistance program grant aid
- (Askeri) ASKERİ YARDIM PROGRAMI BAĞIŞ YARDIMI: Tadil edilmiş 1961 tarihli Yabancı Yardım Kanunun verdiği yetkiye dayanılarak yapılan ve masrafının Amerikan Birleşik Devletlerine ödenmesi beklenmeyen askeri yardım
- nursing grant
- (Ticaret) emzirme yardımı
- privilege grant list
- Ayrıcalık İzin Verme Listesi
- retirement grant
- emekli ikramiyesi
- to grant a remission
- (Avrupa Birliği) bir indirim uygulamak
- to grant a repayment
- (Avrupa Birliği) geri ödeme yapmak
İlgili Terimler
grant teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- An English surname and a Scottish clan name, from a nickname meaning "large"
- A male given name, transferred from the surname
- To admit as true what is not yet satisfactorily proved; to yield belief to; to allow; to yield; to concede
- The act of granting; a bestowing or conferring; concession; allowance; permission
- To give over; to make conveyance of; to give the possession or title of; to convey; -- usually in answer to petition
- The yielding or admission of something in dispute
- The thing or property granted; a gift; a boon
- A transfer of property by deed or writing; especially, au appropriation or conveyance made by the government; as, a grant of land or of money; also, the deed or writing by which the transfer is made
- To bestow or confer, with or without compensation, particularly in answer to prayer or request; to give
- To assent; to consent
- bestow; give; agree; answer to -; donate {f}
- a thing granted, gift, deed, concession {n}
- to bestow, give, yield, admit, allow {v}
- An English surname and a Scottish clan name, from a nickname "large", Anglo-Norman grand
- transferred use of the surname
- An outright award to the student, usually based on financial need This money does not have to be repaid
- the act of providing a subsidy a right or privilege that has been granted 18th President of the United States; commander of the Union armies in the American Civil War (1822-1885) United States actor (born in England) who was the elegant leading man in many films (1904-1986) Scottish painter; cousin of Lytton Strachey and member of the Bloomsbury Group (1885-1978) (law) a transfer of property by deed of conveyance any monetary aid transfer by deed; "grant land"
- A type of financial assistance awarded to an organization for the conduct of research or other program as specified in an approved proposal A federal grant, as opposed to a federal cooperative agreement, is used whenever the awarding office anticipates no substantial programmatic involvement with the recipient during the performance of the activities The PI of a research grant has significantly greater flexibility in making changes to the research plan than the PI of a research contract As with any agreement, a grant has terms and conditions which must be followed
- A legal instrument reflecting a relationship between the United States Government and a State, a local government, or other recipient when (1) the principal purpose of the relationship is to transfer a thing of value to the state or local government or other recipient to carry out a public purpose of support or stimulation authorized by a law of the United States instead of acquiring (by purchase, lease, or barter) property or services for the direct benefit or use of the United States Government; and (2) substantial involvement is not expected between the executive agency and the State, local government, or other recipient when carrying out the activity contemplated in the agreement (31 U S C 6304)
- give on the basis of merit; "Funds are granted to qualified researchers"
- transfer by deed; "grant land"
- let have; "grant permission"; "Mandela was allowed few visitors in prison"
- A type of financial aid based on financial need that the student does not have to repay
- If you say that someone takes you for granted, you are complaining that they benefit from your help, efforts, or presence without showing that they are grateful. The officials felt taken for granted and grumbled loudly
- bestow, especially officially; "grant a degree"; "give a divorce"; "This bill grants us new rights
- (law) a transfer of property by deed of conveyance
- Financial Aid, and the cost of technical cooperation, provided as a gift Grants may be made bilaterally or as contributions to international organisations with development assistance programmes Most British official aid is in the form of grants
- 18th President of the United States; commander of the Union armies in the American Civil War (1822-1885)
- a form of financial assistance whereby a student receives money from the Federal Government, the State Government and/or the institution based upon financial need and/or special ability depending upon the source Contact the USCA Financial Aid Office for more information
- a contract granting the right to operate a subsidiary business; "he got the beer concession at the ball park"
- In governmental terminology, a contribution to or from a unit of government for specific or general purposes This may take the form of donations, bequests, payments to or for local units, aid, reimbursements, etc According to the Constitution of the State of Michigan, grants must be passed by a 2/3 vote in the Senate and House
- Support for a specific project designed by the funds recipient Sponsor has expectations about how the funds are spent Deliverables may include formal project reports Financial reports are required
- give over; surrender or relinquish to the physical control of another
- an award made on the basis of a proposal that typically sets out a series of conditions, such as specific objectives, work plan, timetable, formal financial accounting, and reporting obligations With the exception of some fellowships and special awards, all grants are awarded to the institution (SIUC) rather than to individuals, and proposals and award agreements must be processed through ORDA For definitions of different types of grants, see Sponsored Project Handbook, section 1
- An agreement to transfer money, property, services, or anything of value to accomplish a purpose, such as support or assistance in an area of interest to the grantor For an award to be considered a grant, it normally will contain the following elements: the statement of work allows the project director significant freedom to change emphasis within the general area of work as the project progresses deliverables are minimal, usually consisting of reports only and separate accounting procedures are required
- The award of funds to an organization or individual to undertake charitable or tax-exempt activities
- A financial assistance mechanism whereby money and/or direct assistance is provided to carry out approved activities A grant (as opposed to a cooperative agreement) is to be used whenever the PHS awarding office anticipates no substantial programmatic involvement with the recipient during performance of the financially assisted activities Grants can be classified on the basis of type of activity(ies) supported (research, training, service, etc ); degree of discretion allowed the awarding office (mandatory or discretionary); and/or method of determining amounts of award (negotiated basis or formula)
- If someone in authority grants you something, or if something is granted to you, you are allowed to have it. France has agreed to grant him political asylum It was a Labour government which granted independence to India and Pakistan Permission was granted a few weeks ago. = give
- 1 A financial need-based form of government aid which is usually administered in conjunction with the federal and provincial student loan programs (e g B C Grant, Canada Study Grant for Students With Dependent Children, Canada Study Grant for Female Doctoral Students, Canada Study Grant for Students with Disabilities, etc ) 2 A grant awarded to graduate students and professors by private and government agencies, or by industry, to fund research activities at the university
- A grant is an amount of money that a government or other institution gives to an individual or to an organization for a particular purpose such as education or home improvements. They'd got a special grant to encourage research Unfortunately, my application for a grant was rejected
- be willing to concede; "I grant you this much"
- Scottish painter; cousin of Lytton Strachey and member of the Bloomsbury Group (1885-1978)
- A type of financial assistance awarded to an organization for the conduct of research or other program as specified in an approved proposal A grant, as opposed to a cooperative agreement, is used whenever the awarding office anticipates no substantial programmatic involvement with the recipient during the performance of the activities
- bestow, especially officially; "grant a degree"; "give a divorce"; "This bill grants us new rights"
- To give over; to make conveyance of; to give the possession or title of; to convey; usually in answer to petition
- - an award of financial assistance including cooperative agreements, by FEMA to an eligible state The grant award will be based on the projected amount of total eligible costs for which a state submits an application and that FEMA approves related to a declared fire
- To bestow or confer, with or without compensation, a gift such as land or money by one having control or authority over the gift
- allow to have; "grant a privilege"
- If you take it for granted that something is the case, you believe that it is true or you accept it as normal without thinking about it. He seemed to take it for granted that he should speak as a representative. British-born American actor who was the epitome of the elegant leading man in films such as The Philadelphia Story (1940) and North by Northwest (1959). The 18th President of the United States (1869-1877) and a Civil War general. After his victorious Vicksburg campaign (1862-1863), he was made commander in chief of the Union Army (1864) and accepted the surrender of Gen. Robert E. Lee at Appomattox (1865). Grant's two-term presidency was marred by widespread graft and corruption. W2S1 an amount of money given to someone, especially by the government, for a particular purpose. Banting Sir Frederick Grant Grant Cary Grant Ulysses S. Hiram Ulysses Grant Land Grant College Act of 1862 Still William Grant Thalberg Irving Grant Wood Grant
- a right or privilege that has been granted
- the act of providing a subsidy
- financial assistance in the form of money, or property or technical assistance in lieu of money, awarded by a government agency or private organization (foundation or corporation) to an eligible applicant to accomplish some public purpose Grants obligate the Broward school system to meet specified objectives and hold the system financially liable if funds are not spent in accordance with applicable laws, rules, and regulations of the funding agency
- award; gift, present; contribution, donation {i}
- If you take something for granted, you believe that it is true or accept it as normal without thinking about it. I was amazed that virtually all the things I took for granted up north just didn't happen in London
- If you grant that something is true, you accept that it is true, even though your opinion about it does not change. The magistrates granted that the charity was justified in bringing the action. You use `I grant you' or `I'll grant you' to say that you accept something is true, even though your opinion about it does not change. He took a risk, I'll grant you. But when you think about it, the risk was pretty small
- A legal instrument where the principal purpose is the transfer of money, property, services or anything of value to the recipient in order to accomplish a public purpose of support or stimulation authorized by Federal statute and where substantial involvement by USAID is not anticipated (Chapters 304, 591, 595)
- A grant is an award of funds or property, based on an approved budget or formula, in support of a project or program Grants entail ideas originated and defined by the grantee The grant is a contractual document and restrictions are generally imposed by the awarding agency
- A grant is a kind of financial aid that the student does not have to repay
- A temporary right given by a patent office for a specified period, to prevent anyone else from using the technology defined in the claims of a patent
- A type of financial aid that does not have to be repaid; usually awarded on the basis of need, possibly combined with some skills or characteristics the student possesses
- An award of funds to an organization or individual to undertake charitable activities
- United States actor (born in England) who was the elegant leading man in many films (1904-1986)
- The Grant form of Assistance is used when there is no need for substantial involvement between the recipient and the Agency during performance of the Grant
- A type of financial aid award based on need or merit that is not repaid by the student Click here for a list of grants
- any monetary aid
- grant-back
- In U.S. patent law, a license under which a party grants another the right to use a patent under the condition that the licensee agrees to grant the licensor a license with respect to any improvements to that patent made by the licensee
- grant-forward
- In U.S. patent law, a provision accompanying the license of a patent under which a party agrees not only to grant a licensee the right to use a patent, but also to grant the licensee a license to any improvements made on the existing patent
- grant-in-aid
- The giving of national funds to subsidize a local or regional project
- grant-in-aid
- Providing funds to an institution (such as a school) or person to subsidize a specific project or activity, such as a scholarship
- Grant Wood
- a US artist who painted the painting 'American Gothic' (1892-1942). born Feb. 13, 1892, near Anamosa, Iowa, U.S. died Feb. 12, 1942, Iowa City, Iowa U.S. painter. He was trained as a craftsman and designer as well as a painter. On a visit to Germany in 1928, he was strongly influenced by the sharp detail of 15th-century German and Flemish paintings, and he soon abandoned his Impressionist manner for the detailed, realistic manner for which he is known. His American Gothic caused a sensation when exhibited in 1930. A telling portrait of the sober, hardworking Midwestern farmer, it has become one of the best-known icons of U.S. art, though it is often misinterpreted: the woman is not the man's wife but rather the unmarried daughter designated to stay on the farm to assist her widowed father
- Grant Wood
- (1892-1942) U.S.painter most famous for his painting "American Gothic
- Grant's gazelle
- A large gazelle (Gazella granti) of East Africa that has long curved horns
- grant a favor
- do a good turn, help someone, do a favor
- grant a right
- bestow a privilege, bestow a benefit or entitlement
- grant amnesty
- pardon, acquit, grant immunity
- grant an audience
- agree to see, give an interview
- grant pardon
- pardon, acquit, grant immunity, bestow amnesty
- grant relief
- give assistance to
- grant rights
- bestow privileges, bestow benefits or entitlement
- grant the request
- satisfy the appeal, agree to the petition
- grant-in-aid
- a grant from a central government to a local government a grant to a person or school for some educational project
- grant-maintained
- In Britain, a grant-maintained school is one which receives money directly from the national government rather than from a local authority. The abbreviation GM is also used. a grant-maintained school in Britain receives its money directly from the central government rather than from the local government
- granted
- Given, awarded
He was granted a patent on his invention.
- granted
- Used to concede a point, often before stating some contrasting information
You haven't been a very good father. Granted..
- granted
- Simple past tense and past participle of grant
- land grant
- A grant of land by the US government to encourage the development of western states, especially land transportation and practical higher education
- land-grant
- Alternative spelling of land grant
- revenue sharing grant
- Federal grants distributing a portion of federal tax revenues to state and municipal governments
- grantor
- the maker of a deed
- grantable
- {a} that may be granted or yielded
- grantor
- {n} one by whom a grant is made
- Cary Grant
- a US film actor, who was born in the UK. He is known for being very good-looking and for appearing as characters who are confident, amusing and relaxed, in humorous films such as Bringing Up Baby (1938), His Girl Friday (1940), and The Philadephia Story (1940) (1904-86). orig. Archibald Alexander Leach born Jan. 18, 1904, Bristol, Gloucestershire, Eng. died Nov. 29, 1986, Davenport, Iowa, U.S. British-born U.S. film actor. He performed with an acrobatic comedy troupe in England before he found parts in stage musicals. He made his film debut in This Is the Night (1932) and earned stardom with Mae West in She Done Him Wrong (1933). His debonair charm and good looks, combined with a distinctive voice, made him a longtime popular star in sophisticated comedies such as Topper (1937), Bringing Up Baby (1938), His Girl Friday (1940), and The Philadelphia Story (1941). He also starred in Alfred Hitchcock's thrillers Suspicion (1941), Notorious (1946), To Catch a Thief (1955), and North by Northwest (1959). He received an honorary Academy Award in 1970
- Cary Grant
- (1904-1986, born Archibald Alexander Leach) British-born USA movie actor who starred in such movies as "North by Northwest" and "The Philadelphia Story
- Hugh Grant
- (born 1960) British movie actor who acted in "Four Weddings and a Funeral" and "Notting Hill
- Irving Grant Thalberg
- born May 30, 1899, Brooklyn, N.Y., U.S. died Sept. 14, 1936, Santa Monica, Calif. U.S. film executive. He suffered from health problems at a young age, and fearing his life would not be a long one, he threw himself into his career, joining Universal Pictures after completing high school. He soon became Universal's studio manager in Hollywood. Hired by MGM as head of production in 1925, he became known as the "boy wonder of Hollywood." He tightly controlled MGM's output by supervising script selection and final film editing, and he was responsible for the high quality of movies such as The Barretts of Wimpole Street (1934), Mutiny on the Bounty (1935), and Romeo and Juliet (1936) and for making stars of Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald with Naughty Marietta (1935). Thalberg was one of the founders of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
- Land-Grant College Act of 1862
- or Morrill Act Act of the U.S. Congress (1862) that provided grants of land to states to finance the establishment of colleges specializing in "agriculture and the mechanic arts. " Named for its sponsor, Vermont Congressman Justin Smith Morrill (1810-98), it granted each state 30,000 acres (12,140 hectares) for each of its congressional seats. Funds from the sale of the land were used by some states to establish new schools; other states turned the money over to existing state or private colleges to create schools of agriculture and mechanic arts (known as "A&M" colleges). The military training required in the curriculum of all land-grant schools led to the establishment of the Reserve Officers Training Corps, an educational program for future army, navy, and air force officers. The second Morrill Act (1890) initiated regular appropriations to support land-grant colleges, which came to include 17 predominantly African American colleges and 30 American Indian colleges
- Sir Frederick Grant Banting
- born Nov. 14, 1891, Alliston, Ont., Can. died Feb. 21, 1941, Nfd. Canadian physician. He taught at the University of Toronto from 1923. With Charles Best, he was the first to obtain a pancreatic extract of insulin (1921), which, in the laboratory of J.J.R. Macleod, they isolated in a form effective against diabetes. Banting and Macleod received a 1923 Nobel Prize for the discovery of insulin; Banting voluntarily shared his portion of the prize with Best
- Sir Frederick Grant Banting
- {i} (1891-1941) Canadian physiologist who shared the 1923 Nobel prize for medicine and physiology with John James Macleod for the discovery of insulin
- Ulysses S Grant
- (1822-1885) 18th president of the United States (1869-1877), general of the Union Army during the Civil War
- Ulysses S. Grant
- a US army leader who commanded the army of the Union (=the northern US states) during the American Civil War. His military victories, especially the one at Appomattox against General Robert E. Lee, helped the Union to win the war. He was US President from 1869 to 1877 (1822-85). orig. Hiram Ulysses Grant born April 27, 1822, Point Pleasant, Ohio, U.S. died July 23, 1885, Mount McGregor, N.Y. U.S. general and 18th president of the U.S. (1869-77). He served in the Mexican War (1846-48) under Zachary Taylor. After two years' service on the Pacific coast (1852-54), during which he attempted to supplement his army pay with ultimately unsuccessful business ventures, he resigned his commission. His decision might have been influenced by his fondness for alcohol, which he reportedly drank often during this period. He worked unsuccessfully at farming in Missouri and at his family's leather business in Illinois. When the American Civil War began (1861), he was appointed brigadier general; his 1862 attack on Fort Donelson, Tenn., produced the first major Union victory. He drove off a Confederate attack at Shiloh but was criticized for heavy Union losses. He devised the campaign to take the stronghold of Vicksburg, Miss., in 1863, cutting the Confederacy in half from east to west. Following his victory at the Battle of Chattanooga in 1864, he was appointed commander of the Union army. While Gen. William T. Sherman made his famous march across Georgia, Grant attacked forces under Gen. Robert E. Lee in Virginia, bringing the war to an end in 1865. Grant's administrative ability and innovative strategies were largely responsible for the Union victory. In 1868 his successful Republican presidential campaign made him, at 46, the youngest man yet elected president. His two terms were marred by administrative inaction and political scandal involving members of his cabinet, including the Crédit Mobilier scandal and the Whiskey Ring conspiracy. He was more successful in foreign affairs, where he was aided by his secretary of state, Hamilton Fish. He supported amnesty for Confederate leaders and protection for the civil rights of former slaves. His veto of a bill to increase the amount of legal tender (1874) diminished the currency crisis during the next 25 years. In 1881 he moved to New York City; when a partner defrauded an investment firm co-owned by his son, the family was impoverished. His memoirs were published by his friend Mark Twain
- Ulysses Simpson Grant
- (1822-1885) 18th president of the United States (1869-1877), general of the Union Army during the Civil War
- William Grant Still
- born May 11, 1895, Woodville, Miss., U.S. died Dec. 3, 1978, Los Angeles, Calif. U.S. composer. He initially intended to be a doctor but instead studied music at Oberlin College, learning clarinet, oboe, and violin. He studied composition with George Chadwick (1854-1931) and Edgard Varèse. In the 1920s he worked as an arranger for the dance-band leader Paul Whiteman and for the blues composer W.C. Handy. Still's early style was avant-garde (From the Black Belt, 1926), but from 1930 he sought to develop a distinctive African American art music in five symphonies (including his Afro-American Symphony, 1931), ballets, operas, and choral and solo vocal works
- block grant
- a grant of federal money to state and local governments to support social welfare programs; "block grants reduce federal responsibility for social welfare
- block grant
- usually awarded to state or local governments for broad purposes and in large amounts
- block grant
- Federal funds made to a state for the delivery of a specific group of related services, such as drug abuse related services
- block grant
- An unrestricted federal grant, as to a locality
- block grant
- Lump sum of money given to a state or local governing agency based on a formula to be spent in generally eligible areas Purposes are broadly defined and few restrictions are mandated from the funding source Restrictions can be imposed by the re-granting agency
- block grant
- The total amount of funding provided by the Council to an institution for teaching and research
- block grant
- broad grant of funds to a level of government with few conditions attached
- block grant
- [managed care] A proposed method of administering Medicaid benefits Under a block grant system, Medicaid would not be federally controlled-instead, each state would be given a single grant, and the state would have to decide who is eligible for the benefits and how to divide the funds
- block grant
- An intergovernmental transfer of Federal funds to states and local governments for broad purposes such as health, education or community development in general A block grant holds few requirements for how the money is to be spent, instead offering state and local discretion within general guidelines established by Congress and the executive branch Annual program plans or applications are normally required Also see categorical grant or formula grant
- direct-grant school
- formerly a school that charged tuition fees and also received government grants in return for admitting certain non-paying students who were nominated by the local authorities
- entitled to a grant
- qualified to receive funds to be used for a specific purpose, deserving of a grant
- formula grant
- A grant for state and/ or federal funds to a state or school district, the amount of which is determined by a formula included in the legislation Such grants must be applied for, and the state or school district is usually required to submit to the funding agency data to support its entitlement, an acceptable plan for use of funds, and assurance of compliance with state and/ or federal laws and regulations
- formula grant
- Federal assistance to local governments in accordance with a distribution formula established by law or regulation The actual payment is usually based on such factors as: population characteristics, per capita income, substandard housing, or rate of unemployment Formulas indicate the total of which recipients are entitled if the requirements, regulations or other criteria of law are met Also seecategorical grant or block grant
- formula grant
- (federal) - Grant in aid which provides funds to states, localities, based on a particular formula (e g , poverty rate, number of elderly in population) FY (Fiscal Year ) Funding and budgeting cycle; e g , the fiscal year of the U S federal government is October 1 to September 30
- formula grant
- A grant that the Department is directed by Congress to make to grantees, for which the amount is established by a formula based on certain criteria that are written into the legislation and program regulations; directly awarded and administered in the Department's program offices
- formula grant
- Funding that the Department is directed by Congress to make to eligible applicants, for which the amount is established by a formula based on certain criteria that are written into the legislation and program regulations Formula grants are directly awarded and administered in the Department's program offices
- government grant
- fund provided by the government
- grantable
- {s} able to be granted; able to be given; able to be fulfilled
- grantable
- Capable of being granted
- granted
- acknowledged as a supposition; "given the engine's condition, it is a wonder that it started"
- granted
- You use granted or granted that at the beginning of a clause to say that something is true, before you make a comment on it. Granted that the firm has not broken the law, is the law what it should be? Granted is also an adverb. Granted, he doesn't look too bad for his age, but I don't fancy him. used when you admit that something is true
- granted
- given as a grant; "the special funds granted for his research project
- granted
- conj. admittedly, acknowledged as true
- granted
- given as a grant; "the special funds granted for his research project"
- granted
- You use granted that x, y to mean y is true because of x
- granted
- You use granted to concede a point, often before you adding contrasting information
- granted
- past of grant
- granter
- a person who grants or gives something
- granter
- One who grants
- granter
- {i} one who bestows; one who bequeaths
- granting
- {i} fulfilling (of a request or desire); act of granting, bestowing
- grantor
- The person placing property in a trust
- grantor
- That party in the deed who is the seller or giver
- grantor
- The person who creates a trust
- grantor
- The person who transfers an interest in real property to another person
- grantor
- >> One who grants property or property rights to another
- grantor
- The person conveying an interest in real property
- grantor
- (1) Person who transfers property (2) Person who creates a trust
- grantor
- a person who makes a grant in legal form; "conveyed from grantor to grantee"
- grantor
- A person or entity conveying an interest in real property
- grantor
- The person transfering the title to or an interest in real property to a grantee
- grantor
-
Soru Tarat
Kitaptan sorunu tarat hemen cevaplansın.