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Etsuko
Community TutorWhat is the difference between increase and accrue?
Jan 17, 2019 4:13 AM
Answers · 7
1
The main difference in meaning is the aspect of time. For something to accrue, it increases over time.
January 17, 2019
1
They both involve numbers becoming larger. But when numbers accrue they are being added to a total.
For instance the set of numbers 1, 2, 3, ... and so on is an increasing sequence but nothing "accrues". But if John owes Sue $5, the borrows $3 more without paying back anything, typically the debt accrues. Now he owes her $8. The more he borrows, the more accrues. And in this case the debt is alsi increasing.
Edit: i was wrong about borrowed amounts being considered to "accrue". Accrue is used to mean some amount that increases naturally or periodically, such as age or interest on a loan.
January 17, 2019
1
Increase just means to grow bigger. It has a wider range of meanings.
Accrue is that too, but often has a connection with finance, and means that you receive payments over time. In accounting, it means: make provision for (a charge) at the end of a financial period for work that has been done but not yet invoiced.
January 17, 2019
Main difference:
increase - very common
accrue - basically only accountants & people I try not to listen to
January 17, 2019
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Etsuko
Language Skills
English, Japanese, Other
Learning Language
English, Other
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