MySQL 9.5 Reference Manual Including MySQL NDB Cluster 9.5
      The COLUMN_PRIVILEGES table provides
      information about column privileges. It takes its values from the
      mysql.columns_priv system table.
    
      The COLUMN_PRIVILEGES table has these
      columns:
    
          GRANTEE
        
          The name of the account to which the privilege is granted, in
          '
          format.
        user_name'@'host_name'
          TABLE_CATALOG
        
          The name of the catalog to which the table containing the
          column belongs. This value is always def.
        
          TABLE_SCHEMA
        
The name of the schema (database) to which the table containing the column belongs.
          TABLE_NAME
        
The name of the table containing the column.
          COLUMN_NAME
        
The name of the column.
          PRIVILEGE_TYPE
        
The privilege granted. The value can be any privilege that can be granted at the column level; see Section 15.7.1.6, “GRANT Statement”. Each row lists a single privilege, so there is one row per column privilege held by the grantee.
          In the output from
          SHOW FULL
          COLUMNS, the privileges are all in one column and in
          lowercase, for example,
          select,insert,update,references. In
          COLUMN_PRIVILEGES, there is one
          privilege per row, in uppercase.
        
          IS_GRANTABLE
        
          YES if the user has the
          GRANT OPTION privilege,
          NO otherwise. The output does not list
          GRANT OPTION as a separate row
          with PRIVILEGE_TYPE='GRANT OPTION'.
        
          COLUMN_PRIVILEGES is a
          nonstandard INFORMATION_SCHEMA table.
        
The following statements are not equivalent:
SELECT ... FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMN_PRIVILEGES SHOW GRANTS ...