different between authorised vs granted
authorised
English
Adjective
authorised (not comparable)
- Alternative spelling of authorized
Verb
authorised
- simple past tense and past participle of authorise
authorised From the web:
- what authorised capital
- what authorised mean
- what authorised representative
- what authorised person
- what's authorised share
- what authorised dealer
- what is authorised capital and paid up capital
- what does authorised mean
granted
English
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /???ænt?d/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?????nt?d/
Verb
granted
- simple past tense and past participle of grant
- He was granted a patent on his invention.
Adverb
granted (not comparable)
- Used to concede a point, often before stating some contrasting information.
- He's a good student and usually does well. Granted, he did fail that one test, but I think there were good reasons for that.
- "You haven't been a very good father." "Granted."
Synonyms
- admittedly
Translations
Adjective
granted (not comparable)
- used to mark the premise of a syllogistic argument
- Granted that he has done nothing wrong, he should be set free.
- Granted the lack of evidence, we can make no such conclusion.
Synonyms
- (used to mark the premise of an argument): given
Translations
See also
- take for granted
Anagrams
- drag-net, dragnet
granted From the web:
- what granted means
- what granted means in spanish
- what granted ashputtle wishes
- what take for granted means
- what does granted mean
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