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Audit   /ˈɔdɪt/   Listen
noun
Audit  n.  
1.
An audience; a hearing. (Obs.) "He appeals to a high audit."
2.
An examination in general; a judicial examination. Note: Specifically: An examination of an account or of accounts, with the hearing of the parties concerned, by proper officers, or persons appointed for that purpose, who compare the charges with the vouchers, examine witnesses, and state the result.
3.
The result of such an examination, or an account as adjusted by auditors; final account. "Yet I can make my audit up."
4.
A general receptacle or receiver. (Obs.) "It (a little brook) paid to its common audit no more than the revenues of a little cloud."
Audit ale, a kind of ale, brewed at the English universities, orig. for the day of audit.
Audit house, Audit room, an appendage to a cathedral, for the transaction of its business.



verb
Audit  v. t.  (past & past part. audited; pres. part. auditing)  To examine and adjust, as an account or accounts; as, to audit the accounts of a treasure, or of parties who have a suit depending in court.



Audit  v. i.  To settle or adjust an account. "Let Hocus audit; he knows how the money was disbursed."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Audit" Quotes from Famous Books



... the voices of the market-women, crying their artichokes and haricots, and above them rang—"Ardent! Vaillant! ..." Audit might have been the voice of Paris itself, lying down there in her mist, Paris of lost Alsace and hopeless revanche, of ardor and charm crushed once, as they might be again, as the voice of that pale girl in black, with her air of coming from lights and cigarette smoke, and of these simple mothers ...
— Antwerp to Gallipoli - A Year of the War on Many Fronts--and Behind Them • Arthur Ruhl

... of position or influence appear to have been able to borrow monastic books. For example, in 1320, the prior and convent of Ely acknowledge receiving ten books from the executors of a rector of Balsham, who had borrowed them.[3] Some years later, at an audit of books of Christ Church, Canterbury, seventeen manuscripts— thirteen of them on law—were noted as in the hands of seculars, among whom ...
— Old English Libraries, The Making, Collection, and Use of Books • Ernest A. Savage

... and fame for a fat legacy from your husband's last remaining relative on the mother's side. Keep your mind easy, my Renee—we are all at work for Louis, Lenoncourts, Chaulieus, and the whole band of Mme. de Macumer's followers. Martignac will probably put him into the audit department. But if you won't tell me why you bury yourself in the ...
— Letters of Two Brides • Honore de Balzac

... blood-sucking twelve per cent. interest? these are evils which we owe to our own will, which flow merely from our perverted habit, having nothing about them which can be seen or handled, mere dreams of empty avarice. Wretched is he who can take pleasure in the size of the audit book of his estate, in great tracts of land cultivated by slaves in chains, in huge flocks and herds which require provinces and kingdoms for their pasture ground, in a household of servants, more in number than some of the most ...
— L. Annaeus Seneca On Benefits • Seneca

... rambling houses in the style of antique English manorial chateaus, ill planned, perhaps, as regarded convenience and economy, with long rambling galleries, and windows innumerable, that evidently had never looked for that severe audit to which they were afterwards summoned by William Pitt; but displaying, in the dwelling rooms, a comfort and "cosiness," combined with magnificence, not always so effectually attained in modern times. Here were old libraries, ...
— Autobiographic Sketches • Thomas de Quincey


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