0 past simple and past participle of audit
1 to make an official examination of the accounts of a business and produce a report
2 to go to a class or educational course for pleasure or interest, without being tested or receiving a grade at the end:
As a senior citizen, he is allowed to audit university classes.
Less than a quarter of prisons had audited any of their chronic disease services in the last two years.
The publication of our research is also one method by which scientists are audited.
During this period, data collected from the collaborating hospitals should be registered and possibly audited.
Once the set up was approved, the patient was imaged weekly and audited by the clinicians at a weekly meeting.
The sample was 400 audited and 150 non-audited taxpayers.
Furthermore, we assume that the enforcement strategy (probability of being audited and the penalty function) is communicated to all firms.
Fetal intervention should only be undertaken in a small number of specialist fetal medicine centres and only on a carefully audited and reported basis.
This group is important, but has not been previously carefully audited.