auditor
auditor — noun
1. a person whose work is to check an organization's financial records officially a
a person whose work is to check an organization's financial records officially and report whether they are correct
The external auditor asked for hotel bills from the sales team.
collocation: external auditor
Before the merger, an auditor reviewed three years of payroll records.
Our auditor found two missing signatures on the charity's expense forms.
At the board meeting, the auditor presented her final report.
A government auditor visited the factory after the tax complaint.
- examiner
a broader word for someone who checks something carefully
- inspector
often used for checking places, safety, or standards, not only financial records
- reviewer
can suggest checking work or documents without the formal financial role
- accountant
a related job, but it is not necessarily the independent checking role
文法句型
internal auditor
external auditor
independent auditor
auditor's report
用法筆記
Often appears with modifiers such as internal, external, and independent. Distinguish from sense 2 and sense 3 by the business or financial context and by the idea of an official check.
常見錯誤
2. a person who joins a college class only to learn, without taking tests or earnin
a person who joins a college class only to learn, without taking tests or earning credit
Rita joined the history seminar as an auditor after graduation.
pattern: as an auditor
The professor let two local teachers attend as auditors.
As an auditor, Ben could join discussions but got no grade.
The music school accepts senior citizens as auditors for free.
The registrar marked Ken as an auditor, not a full student.
- enrolled student
usually takes the class for credit and receives a grade
文法句型
register as an auditor
attend as an auditor
take a class as an auditor
用法筆記
Usually follows as in phrases like take a class as an auditor or register as an auditor. Distinguish from sense 1, which names a job, and from sense 3, which is only the general idea of a listener.
常見錯誤
3. someone there to hear what is being said, especially carefully or as part of an
someone there to hear what is being said, especially carefully or as part of an audience
The hall was full of quiet auditors during the poetry reading.
formal use: auditor = listener
Each auditor listened closely as the witness described the fire.
From the back row, Hana was an eager auditor of the debate.
During the bishop's sermon, the auditors sat silent in the front pews.
- listener
the normal everyday word
- hearer
more formal and often used in writing about language or law
- audience member
fits public events better than private listening
- speaker
the person talking rather than listening
用法筆記
Formal and uncommon in modern everyday English. Most speakers would usually say listener or member of the audience unless they want an older or more literary tone.