Offering

'ɒfərɪŋ

nounBeginner📊CommonAction
2 meanings2 idioms/phrases3 questions

Definitions

2 meanings
1

Something given or presented, often as a gift, contribution, or sacrifice.

'ɒfərɪŋ

nounneutralBeginner
Action

Something presented as a gift or contribution.

The charity received generous offerings from the community.

💡 Simply: An offering is like a present or donation. Imagine you're sharing your toys with a friend – that's an offering of your generosity!

👶 For kids: An offering is something you give to someone or something. Like, giving a birthday present to a friend or giving food to your pet.

More Examples

2

The artist presented her new painting as an offering to the gallery.

3

The initial public offering (IPO) was well-received by investors.

How It's Used

Religious

"The church collected offerings during the service."

Financial

"The company made a public offering of its stock."

2

The act of presenting or putting forth something for acceptance, consideration, or use.

'ɒfərɪŋ

nounneutralmedium
Action

The act of presenting something for acceptance.

The offering of a solution to the problem was welcomed by all.

💡 Simply: It's like when someone offers to help you carry your groceries. The offering is that they're giving you assistance.

👶 For kids: When you share something with someone. Like offering a cookie to your friend.

More Examples

2

The company's offering of a new product line boosted sales.

3

The real estate listing described the property's offering.

How It's Used

Business

"The company's offering of new services expanded its customer base."

Real Estate

"The offering price for the property was quite attractive."

Tip:Think of the action itself, the 'act of offering'. It's the process, not just the thing.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Idioms & expressions

make an offering

To present or donate something, often in a religious or charitable context.

"The congregation makes an offering to support the church's mission."

first offering

The initial presentation of a new product or service.

"The company's first offering was met with enthusiasm from consumers."

From Middle English *offeringe*, from the verb *offer*, from Old French *of(e)rir*, from Latin *offerre* 'to offer'.

Historically, the word has often referred to religious sacrifices or gifts, but the term's use has expanded over time.

Memory tip

Think of an offering as something you willingly give, like an offer, but usually more significant.

Word Origin

LanguageLatin
Original meaning

"to present"

make an offeringreligious offeringpublic offeringinitial offering

Common misspellings

offerringofferingg

Usage

40%Spoken
60%Written