grant in the Oxford-Hachette French Dictionary

Translations for grant in the English»French Dictionary

I.grant [Brit ɡrɑːnt, Am ɡrænt] N

II.grant [Brit ɡrɑːnt, Am ɡrænt] VB trans

grant-aided [Brit ˈɡrɑːnteɪdɪd, Am ˈɡræntˌeɪdəd] ADJ

grant in the PONS Dictionary

Translations for grant in the English»French Dictionary (Go to French»English)

Your search term in other parts of the dictionary
award damages, grant
to grant probate of a will

Translations for grant in the French»English Dictionary (Go to English»French)

grant Glossary « Intégration et égalité des chances » courtesy of the French-German Youth Office

Translations for grant in the French»English Dictionary

Your search term in other parts of the dictionary
(study) grant
British English

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
These competitors were well aware of the fact that the GPO would never grant them such a licence.
en.wikipedia.org
These elected governments have the authority to grant varying degrees of powers to courts and tribunals, and deference should be shown to the governments' decisions.
en.wikipedia.org
Over $80,000 in prize money was awarded in 2008, with a $20,000 business grant awarded to the top team.
en.wikipedia.org
It could grant them exploitation rights to potential energy and mineral wealth above and below the sea floor.
www.bbc.co.uk
The corporation received a $6 million grant from the federal government, but needed to borrow to pay for the rest of the costs of construction.
en.wikipedia.org
The player's school receives a duplicate trophy, as well as a scholarship grant.
en.wikipedia.org
Two-thirds of refugee families had still not received their government grant.
en.wikipedia.org
It is so pitiful, so modest, that we must needs relent and grant it.
en.wikipedia.org
Grant is a lover of books and has read widely, which shows not just in her lovely literary allusions, but in splashes of poetic description and a refreshing succinctness.
www.theage.com.au
He was given a grant to study the relationship, if any, between music and juvenile crime wave which had suddenly broken out in the early 1950s.
en.wikipedia.org

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