accredit
accredit — 動詞
1. to give a school, hospital, person, or product a formal stamp of approval, certi
認證;授權
正式認可符合標準或授予資格
to give a school, hospital, person, or product a formal stamp of approval, certifying that it meets the required standards set by a governing body — for example, declaring a university qualified to award degrees, or licensing a journalist to cover an event.
The Ministry of Education accredited Lin's small cooking school last spring.
教育部去年春天認證了林老師的小型烹飪學校。
transitive: accredit + institution
Fadi's clinic was accredited by the national health board after a long inspection.
瑪雅的診所經過長時間的檢查後,獲得了國家衛生主管機關的認證。
passive: be accredited by + governing body
Reporters must be accredited as press members before entering the Olympic stadium.
記者必須先取得媒體採訪的認證,才能進入奧運場館。
Only three labs in the country are accredited to test drinking water for heavy metals.
全國只有三間實驗室獲得授權,可以檢驗飲用水中的重金屬。
Tokyo accredited the new ambassador to Brazil during a quiet ceremony at the palace.
東京在皇宮的一場低調儀式上,正式任命了新任駐巴西大使。
- certify
very close in meaning; 'certify' is more often used for individuals or products meeting a standard
- authorize
broader — about giving permission to act, not specifically about meeting standards
- license
issuing a legal permit, often paid; narrower than accredit
- endorse
showing public support; less formal than accredit and not tied to standards inspection
- revoke
to take back an existing accreditation
- disqualify
to rule that someone or something fails to meet the standard
文法句型
accredit + noun
be accredited as + noun
accredit + noun + to + place
用法筆記
Frequently passive in everyday writing — the named agent (the body that grants approval) often appears in a 'by'-phrase, or is left out when obvious. Subject is usually an institution, an inspecting authority, or a government; object is usually a school, hospital, lab, journalist, or diplomat.