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词汇 grant-in-aid
释义

Definition of grant-in-aid in English:

grant-in-aid

nounPlural grants-in-aid
  • An amount of money given to local government, an institution, or a particular scholar.

    (给地方政府,机构或某学者的)资助款,补助金

    funding was provided by a Fulbright grant-in-aid
    mass noun we receive grant-in-aid from the Scottish Office
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He sought first a grant-in-aid, then an interest-free loan and, finally, had to settle for a loan of $3.75 thousand million at two per cent interest.
    • Additional funding came from two grants-in-aid from the Geological Society of America.
    • One new proposal would allow student-athletes to accept nonathletic financial aid over and above the grant-in-aid to cover attendance.
    • It has awarded scores of grants-in-aid and project grants, and postgraduate awards for clinical and basic higher degree candidates.
    • The payments will be staggered, giving priority to child support grants in June, old-age grants and war veterans in July, disability grants and grants-in-aid in August and foster-care grants in September.
    • The fieldwork in Japan was partly supported by grants-in-aid from the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture.
    • It proposed distributing block grants to state agencies rather than grants-in-aid to local authorities.
    • This expansion of governmental activity in the 1930s as a response to the depressed economy intertwined various levels of government through the strategy of federal administrators providing grants-in-aid to the states.
    • Both movements were funded by voluntary subscription, although small grants-in-aid were made to voluntary schools after 1833.
    • In 1960-61 grants-in-aid to Canadian universities increased almost tenfold, to $9.5 million.
    • Sites will be required to apply for subsidies from the conditional grant for community-based sites, and grants-in-aid for school-based sites.
    • No grants-in-aid of any kind were received from either local or central sources.
    • The money for travel - up from £4.7m the year before - comes from taxpayers through Government grants-in-aid.
    • One alternative to a new aid program would be for Congress to simply increase the allocations of one or more existing grants-in-aid that have broad purposes.
    • The grant-in-aid promised to the special schools is paid irregularly making life more difficult for them.
    • The government then pays grant-in-aid to the BBC of a sum equivalent to the licence fee revenue.
    • The schools had been sanctioned grant-in-aid by the government prior to 1973-74.
    • On aided institutions, the Bench made it clear that ‘a minority institution does not cease to be so the moment grant-in-aid is received.’
    • Unfortunately it is doing just the opposite - limiting the growth of grants-in-aid and enacting tax cuts that will automatically widen state and local budget gaps.
    • Now it is recognized that the capabilities of state and local governments have progressed significantly and that control over grants-in-aid from the federal level is exceedingly difficult in any case.

Definition of grant-in-aid in US English:

grant-in-aid

nounˌɡrænt ən ˈeɪdˌɡrant ən ˈād
  • An amount of money given to local government, an institution, or a particular scholar.

    (给地方政府,机构或某学者的)资助款,补助金

    funding was provided by a Fulbright grant-in-aid
    mass noun we receive grant-in-aid from the Scottish Office
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Now it is recognized that the capabilities of state and local governments have progressed significantly and that control over grants-in-aid from the federal level is exceedingly difficult in any case.
    • He sought first a grant-in-aid, then an interest-free loan and, finally, had to settle for a loan of $3.75 thousand million at two per cent interest.
    • No grants-in-aid of any kind were received from either local or central sources.
    • The fieldwork in Japan was partly supported by grants-in-aid from the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture.
    • Additional funding came from two grants-in-aid from the Geological Society of America.
    • The government then pays grant-in-aid to the BBC of a sum equivalent to the licence fee revenue.
    • One new proposal would allow student-athletes to accept nonathletic financial aid over and above the grant-in-aid to cover attendance.
    • The schools had been sanctioned grant-in-aid by the government prior to 1973-74.
    • It has awarded scores of grants-in-aid and project grants, and postgraduate awards for clinical and basic higher degree candidates.
    • One alternative to a new aid program would be for Congress to simply increase the allocations of one or more existing grants-in-aid that have broad purposes.
    • The grant-in-aid promised to the special schools is paid irregularly making life more difficult for them.
    • This expansion of governmental activity in the 1930s as a response to the depressed economy intertwined various levels of government through the strategy of federal administrators providing grants-in-aid to the states.
    • In 1960-61 grants-in-aid to Canadian universities increased almost tenfold, to $9.5 million.
    • The money for travel - up from £4.7m the year before - comes from taxpayers through Government grants-in-aid.
    • On aided institutions, the Bench made it clear that ‘a minority institution does not cease to be so the moment grant-in-aid is received.’
    • The payments will be staggered, giving priority to child support grants in June, old-age grants and war veterans in July, disability grants and grants-in-aid in August and foster-care grants in September.
    • Sites will be required to apply for subsidies from the conditional grant for community-based sites, and grants-in-aid for school-based sites.
    • Both movements were funded by voluntary subscription, although small grants-in-aid were made to voluntary schools after 1833.
    • It proposed distributing block grants to state agencies rather than grants-in-aid to local authorities.
    • Unfortunately it is doing just the opposite - limiting the growth of grants-in-aid and enacting tax cuts that will automatically widen state and local budget gaps.
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