| ACCREDITED | • accredited v. Simple past tense and past participle of accredit. • accredited adj. Given official approval after meeting certain standards, as an accredited university; or as disease free cattle. • ACCREDIT v. to accept as true. |
| CREDITABLE | • creditable adj. Credible or believable. • creditable adj. That brings credit or honour; respectable. • creditable adj. That can be assigned; assignable. |
| CREDITABLY | • creditably adv. In a creditable manner; reputably, without disgrace. • CREDITABLE adv. trustworthy. |
| CREDITLESS | • creditless adj. Without credit (financially). • CREDITLESS adj. without credit. |
| DISCREDITS | • discredits v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of discredit. • DISCREDIT v. to refuse to believe in. |
| EUROCREDIT | • EUROCREDIT n. a loan in which the currency of the loan is different from the national currency of the lending bank. |
| HEREDITARY | • hereditary adj. Passed on as an inheritance, by last will or intestate. • hereditary adj. Of a title, honor or right: legally granted to somebody’s descendant after that person’s death. • hereditary adj. Of a person: holding a legally hereditary title or rank. |
| HEREDITIES | • heredities n. Plural of heredity. • HEREDITY n. the genetic transmission of characteristics. |
| HEREDITIST | • HEREDITIST n. an adherent of hereditarianism, the view that heredity is the major factor in determining human and animal behaviour, also HEREDITARIANIST. |
| MISCREDITS | • miscredits v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of miscredit. • MISCREDIT v. (archaic) to disbelieve. |
| OVEREDITED | • overedited v. Simple past tense and past participle of overedit. • OVEREDIT v. to edit more than necessary. |
| REACCREDIT | • reaccredit v. (Transitive) To accredit again or anew. • re-accredit v. Alternative spelling of reaccredit. • REACCREDIT v. to accredit again. |
| UNCREDITED | • uncredited adj. Unacknowledged. • uncredited adj. Not believed. • uncredited adj. (Media) Not appearing in the credits. |