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noun

provision

pruh-VIHZH-uhn
noun
1
A supply of something needed for the future, especially food.
"The ship was stocked with enough provisions for a six-month voyage."
"They packed provisions for the long hike into the mountains."
2
A specific clause or condition within a law, contract, or agreement.
"The lease includes a provision allowing early termination with 30 days notice."
"A provision in the new law requires companies to report data breaches."
3
Money a business sets aside in its accounts to cover an expected future cost or loss.
"The bank increased its provision for bad debts this quarter."
verb
1
To supply someone or something with what is needed, especially food or equipment.
"The expedition was provisioned with dried food and extra fuel."
2
In IT, to set up an account, device, or system so it is ready for a user.
"IT will provision your laptop with the standard company software before you start."

How to Use Provision

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishSupplies set aside for future use, a clause in a legal document, or (in tech/finance) preparing accounts, systems, or accounts for use.

Common pairings
make provision for a provision in the contract provision an account

Word Forms

provisioned past tense, provisions plural, provisions singular

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The ship was stocked with enough _____ for a six-month voyage.

Etymology

From Old French provision, from Latin provisio, "foresight, preparation" — from providere, "to see ahead, provide for."

Related Words

Rhymes for provision

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Definitions: FreeDict original editorial