different between rebit vs debit
rebit
English
Etymology 1
Verb
rebit
- simple past tense of rebite
Etymology 2
re- +? bit?
Noun
rebit (plural rebits)
- (physics) Any of an arbitrary number of quantum mechanical binary states that are maximally entangled with every other one (in the real-vector-space theory).
Anagrams
- Berti, Breit, Tiber, biter, tribe
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debit
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Middle French debet, from Latin debitum (“what is owed, a debt”), neuter of debitus, past participle of debere (“to owe”); Doublet of debt.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?d?b.?t/
- Rhymes: -?b?t
Noun
debit (countable and uncountable, plural debits)
- In bookkeeping, an entry in the left hand column of an account.
- A cash sale is recorded as debit on the cash account and as credit on the sales account.
- A sum of money taken out of a bank account. Thus called, because in bank's bookkeeping a cash withdrawal diminishes the amount of money held on the account, i.e. bank's debt to the customer.
Derived terms
- debit card
Related terms
- debt
- debitor
- debenture
Translations
See also
- credit
Verb
debit (third-person singular simple present debits, present participle debiting, simple past and past participle debited)
- To make an entry on the debit side of an account.
- To record a receivable in the bookkeeping.
Translations
Adjective
debit (not comparable)
- of or relating to process of taking money from an account
- of or relating to the debit card function of a debit card rather than its often available credit card function (Can we add an example for this sense?)
Antonyms
- credit
Derived terms
- debit card
Translations
Further reading
- debit in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
- debit in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
Anagrams
- betid, bidet, bited
Indonesian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [?deb?t?]
- Hyphenation: dé?bit
Etymology 1
- From English debit, from Middle French debet (Modern French débit), from Latin d?bitum (“what is owed, a debt”).
- Displaced earlier debet, which was loanword from Dutch debet.
Noun
debit (first-person possessive debitku, second-person possessive debitmu, third-person possessive debitnya)
- (accounting) debit:
- In bookkeeping, an entry in the left hand column of an account.
- A sum of money taken out of a bank account. Thus called, because in bank's bookkeeping a cash withdrawal diminishes the amount of money held on the account, i.e. bank's debt to the customer.
- (accounting) receivable: a debt owed, usually to a business, from the perspective of that business.
- Synonym: piutang
Alternative forms
- debet
Affixed terms
Compounds
Related terms
Etymology 2
Semantic loan from Dutch debiet (“discharge, flowrate”), from French débit (“flow, rate of flow, discharge”), from Latin d?bitum (“what is owed, a debt”).
Noun
debit (first-person possessive debitku, second-person possessive debitmu, third-person possessive debitnya)
- (hydrology) discharge
- (of fluid) flowrate
Compounds
Further reading
- “debit” in Kamus Besar Bahasa Indonesia (KBBI) Daring, Jakarta: Badan Pengembangan dan Pembinaan Bahasa, Kementerian Pendidikan dan Kebudayaan Republik Indonesia, 2016.
Romanian
Etymology
From French débit.
Noun
debit n (plural debite)
- debit
Declension
debit From the web:
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