0 present 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.
This result suggests that the government may be severely restricted in its ability to control emissions, if auditing is sufficiently expensive.
Next, there is an evaluation phase over a period extending in general from 1 to 5 years including data registry, intermediary analysis, and possibly auditing.
The state continually monitors the associations, auditing, approving, and maintaining records of their budgets on a regular basis.
Auditing thus affords an inspection of the demand for movies with a specific content.
These problems increased day by day due to lack of efficient auditing, overpopulation and accelerated migration to urban areas, wrong location choices, and unplanned industrialization.
This ' 'auditing' ' is essential if we are to facilitate further development in the presence of inconsistency.
There were no structures for auditing these foundations, and politicians and the military elite used them as private sources of wealth creation.
For central government, maintaining bureaucratic monitoring and auditing systems is costly.