1 to increase over a period of time, or to get an amount of something gradually over time: --
3 to allow something to increase in amount over a period of time: --
4 if a payment or an advantage accrues to you, you receive it or have the right to receive it: --
The school district is being criticized for allowing $74 million in vacation pay to accrue to school administrators and other nonteachers.
accrue to sb Building societies are mutually owned, and benefits accrue to members rather than shareholders.
Past earnings are generally 'valorized ' to reflect changes in living standards between the time pension rights accrued and the time they are claimed.
First, construction against the drafter balances the advantage that accrues from authoring a contract.
And boys and girls agreed that they could learn more music and accrue more musical knowledge with the aid of technology.
The benefits accruing through positive discrimination are neither enough nor shared by all.
Why, then, should there be any peculiar loss of dignity accruing to the fact of contradicting and being contradicted in court?
As a consequence, parents cannot capture the returns to their human capital investment efforts that accrue to their children.
In longer periods of poverty past savings are depleted, household goods deteriorate and cannot be replaced, and debts accrue and become unsustainable.
Table 3 presents the proportion of people in mid-life with any state pension entitlements accrued through either contributions or credits by age and caring status.