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audit

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audit

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++au·dit1 /ˈɔːdɪt $ ˈɒː-/ noun [countable, uncountable]  1 an official examination of a company’s financial records in order to check that they are correct 审计 the annual audit 年度审计internal audit (=an audit carried out by a company’s own staff) 内部审计2 formal a detailed examination of something in order to check if it is good enough 审查,检查 Start with an audit of existing services within the community. 从检查社区现有的服务开始。
Examples from the Corpus
auditAdministrative audits involve chefs, cooks, bakers, and other kitchen personnel.In addition to the statutory requirements, the form and content of an audit report is governed by requirements laid down in auditing standards.An audit of unplanned pregnancies seen in one practice also emphasised the need for great care in counselling people using the pill.This brings the number of companies and audit firms down to 2,076 and 164 respectively.Increasingly we are subject to medical audit.This is not to say that a three E's audit is never undertaken in nationalized industries.But the audit rate for poor taxpayers earning under $ 25,000 rose in 1995, to 1. 04 percent.Our independent non-executive directors have a particularly valuable role especially in relation to audit and remuneration matters.internal auditMany senior corporation executives have a background in accounting, internal auditing, or finance.This is known as an internal audit.Four major fields of accounting are public, management, and government accounting, and internal auditing.Most employers also prefer applicants who are familiar with computers and their applications in accounting and internal auditing.The Guidance concentrates on the organizational status of internal audit and the objectivity of internal auditors in achieving the requisite independence.In this respect it could feature as an aspect of the internal audit of a company.The internal audit function reports to the Audit Committee.The banks have conducted two internal audits and come up with about $ 30 million in dormant accounts.
Related topics: Finance, College
audit2 verb [transitive]  1. BFto officially examine a company’s financial records in order to check that they are correct 的账目,审计,稽查2. American EnglishSEC to attend a course at university without intending to take examinations in it or get a credit for it 旁听〔大学课程〕
→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
auditThe Labor Department audited 10,631 job orders that were related to H-1B applications.The C. and A. G. is given the responsibility for auditing all appropriation accounts by the 1921 Act.The fund is audited annually by an accountant.So he does his own audit before the company audits him.Process and outcome criteria are standards against which to audit standards of practice.
From Longman Business Dictionaryauditau‧dit1 /ˈɔːdətˈɒː-/ noun [countable]1ACCOUNTING an official examination of a person’s or organization’s accounts by an expert, to check that they are true and honestAn audit of the company showed accumulated losses of £1.5 billion.The accounts will need to have an independent audit before they can be submitted.We carry out a full internal audit once a year. continuous audit external audit2HUMAN RESOURCESCOMMERCEan examination of an organization’s activities or performanceThe prison population has risen by 2,500 in the last six months, according to a government audit.She wants the oil company to agree to an external audit of its environmental policies. green audit social auditauditaudit2 verb [transitive]1ACCOUNTING to officially check that an individual’s or organization’s accounts are true and honestTo taxpayers who’ve been audited, the Internal Revenue Service is a frightening organization.2COMMERCEECONOMICSto check a particular part of an organization’s activities or performanceWhen the cars it builds in Canada were audited, they were accepted as having the 50% North American content required under trade rules.→ See Verb tableOrigin audit (1400-1500) Latin past participle of audire; → AUDIO
au·dit1 nounaudit2 verbChineseSyllable
Corpus Business a official examination of an company’s financial


audit
I
audit1 /ˈɔːdət, ˈɔːdɪt $ ˈɒː-/ noun [uncountable and countable]
1. an official examination of a company’s financial records in order to check that they are correct:
    the annual audit
    internal audit (=an audit carried out by a company’s own staff)
2. formal a detailed examination of something in order to check if it is good enough:
    Start with an audit of existing services within the community.

II
audit2 verb [transitive]
 Date: 1400-1500
 Language: Latin
 Origin: past participle of audire; audio
1. to officially examine a company’s financial records in order to check that they are correct
2. American English to attend a course at university without intending to take examinations in it or get a credit for it


auditBrE /ˈɔːdɪt/ 🔊NAmE /ˈɔːdɪt/ 🔊 noun [countable, uncountable] an official examination of business and financial records to see that they are true and correct 审计;稽核an annual audit年度审计a tax audit税项审计an official examination of the quality or standard of sth (质量或标准的)审查,检查   see also green audit
auditBrE /ˈɔːdɪt/ 🔊NAmE /ˈɔːdɪt/ 🔊 verbpresent simple - I / you / we / they audit BrE /ˈɔːdɪt/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈɔːdɪt/ 🔊present simple - he / she / it audits BrE /ˈɔːdɪts/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈɔːdɪts/ 🔊past simple audited BrE /ˈɔːdɪtɪd/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈɔːdɪtɪd/ 🔊past participle audited BrE /ˈɔːdɪtɪd/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈɔːdɪtɪd/ 🔊 -ing form auditing BrE /ˈɔːdɪtɪŋ/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈɔːdɪtɪŋ/ 🔊~ sth to officially examine the financial accounts of a company 审计;稽核~ sth (NAmE) to attend a course at college or university but without taking any exams or receiving credit 旁听(大学课程)