credit hour

credit hour
hour (def. 12).
[1925-30]

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • credit hour — credit hours N COUNT A credit hour is a credit that a school or college awards to students who have completed a course of study. [AM] By last fall, he needed only two credit hours to graduate …   English dictionary

  • credit hour — n. Educ. HOUR (sense 7) …   English World dictionary

  • credit hour — noun a unit of academic credit; one hour a week for an academic semester • Syn: ↑semester hour • Hypernyms: ↑credit, ↑course credit * * * noun : the unit of measuring educational credit usually consisting of one weekly period lasting… …   Useful english dictionary

  • credit hour — cred′it hour n. edu one unit of academic credit, usu. representing attendance at one scheduled period of instruction per week throughout a semester, quarter, or term • Etymology: 1925–30 …   From formal English to slang

  • credit hour — noun Date: circa 1927 the unit of measuring educational credit usually based on the number of classroom hours per week throughout a term …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • hour — hourless, adj. /oweur, ow euhr/, n. 1. a period of time equal to one twenty fourth of a mean solar or civil day and equivalent to 60 minutes: He slept for an hour. 2. any specific one of these 24 periods, usually reckoned in two series of 12, one …   Universalium

  • credit — creditless, adj. /kred it/, n. 1. commendation or honor given for some action, quality, etc.: Give credit where it is due. 2. a source of pride or honor: You are a credit to your school. 3. the ascription or acknowledgment of something as due or… …   Universalium

  • credit — /ˈkrɛdət / (say kreduht) noun 1. commendation or honour or acknowledgement given for some action, quality, etc. 2. a person or thing being acknowledged as a source of commendation or honour: a credit to the team. 3. influence or authority… …  

  • credit — I. noun Etymology: Middle French, from Old Italian credito, from Latin creditum something entrusted to another, loan, from neuter of creditus, past participle of credere to believe, entrust more at creed Date: 1537 1. reliance on the truth or… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • hour — noun Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French ure, eure, from Late Latin & Latin; Late Latin hora canonical hour, from Latin, hour of the day, from Greek hōra more at year Date: 13th century 1. a time or office for daily liturgical devotion;… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

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