释义 |
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2024war•ran•ty /ˈwɔrənti, ˈwɑr-/USA pronunciation n., pl. -ties, v., -tied, ty•ing. n. - Businessa written guarantee given to a purchaser that the manufacturer, dealer, etc., will make repairs or replace defective parts free of charge for a stated period of time: [countable]a one-year warranty.[uncountable]This computer is under warranty.
v. [~ + object] - Businessto provide a manufacturer's or dealer's warranty for:to warranty the parts for a year.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024war•ran•ty (n. wôr′ən tē, wor′-;v. wôr′ən tē′, wor′-),USA pronunciation n., pl. -ties, v., -tied, -ty•ing. n. - an act or an instance of warranting;
assurance; authorization; warrant. - Law
- a stipulation, explicit or implied, in assurance of some particular in connection with a contract, as of sale:an express warranty of the quality of goods.
- Also called covenant of warranty. a covenant in a deed to land by which the party conveying assures the grantee that he or she will enjoy the premises free from interference by any person claiming under a superior title. Cf. quitclaim deed, warranty deed.
- (in the law of insurance) a statement or promise, made by the party insured, and included as an essential part of the contract, falsity or nonfulfillment of which renders the policy void.
- a judicial document, as a warrant or writ.
- Businessa written guarantee given to the purchaser of a new appliance, automobile, or other item by the manufacturer or dealer, usually specifying that the manufacturer will make any repairs or replace defective parts free of charge for a stated period of time.
v.t. - Businessto provide a manufacturer's or dealer's warranty for:The automaker warranties its new cars against exterior rust.
- Anglo-French (Old French guarantie). See warrant, -y3
- Middle English warantie 1300–50
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers:: warranty /ˈwɒrəntɪ/ n ( pl -ties)- a covenant, express or implied, by which the vendor of real property vouches for the security of the title conveyed
- an express or implied term in a contract, such as an undertaking that goods contracted to be sold shall meet specified requirements as to quality, etc
- an undertaking by the party insured that the facts given regarding the risk are as stated
Etymology: 14th Century: from Anglo-French warantie, from warantir to warrant, variant of Old French guarantir; see warrant |