ACCEPT vs ALLOW: VERB
- To receive something willingly.
- To agree to pay.
- To endure patiently.
- To receive or admit to; to agree to; to assent to; to submit to.
- To receive as adequate or satisfactory.
- To regard as proper, usual, true, or to believe in.
- To admit to a place or a group.
- To receive, especially with a consent, with favour, or with approval.
- Take on as one's own the expenses or debts of another person
- Make use of or accept for some purpose
- Give an affirmative reply to; respond favorably to
- React favorably to; consider right and proper
- Be sexually responsive to, used of a female domesticated mammal
- Consider or hold as true
- Tolerate or accommodate oneself to
- Be designed to hold or take
- Admit into a group or community
- Receive willingly something given or offered
- Of a deliberative body: receive (a report) officially, as from a committee
- Give or assign a resource to a particular person or cause
- To render physically possible
- To take into account by making an allowance.
- To acknowledge or concede.
- To not bar or obstruct.
- Make a possibility or provide opportunity for; permit to be attainable or cause to remain
- Consent to, give permission
- Afford possibility
- Allow the other (baseball) team to score
- Make it possible through a specific action or lack of action for something to happen
- Allow the presence of or allow (an activity) without opposing or prohibiting
- Give or assign a share of money or time to a particular person or cause
- Allow or plan for a certain possibility; concede the truth or validity of something
- Grant as a discount or in exchange
- Let have
ACCEPT vs ALLOW: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To receive something, especially with favor. Often used with of.
- To receive (a transplanted organ or tissue) without immunological rejection.
- To take payment in the form of.
- To consent to pay, as by a signed agreement.
- To receive officially.
- To be able to hold (something applied or inserted).
- To endure resignedly or patiently.
- To understand as having a specific meaning.
- To regard as true; believe in.
- To regard as proper, usual, or right.
- To admit to a group, organization, or place.
- To receive (something offered), especially with gladness or approval.
- To agree to take (a duty or responsibility).
- To answer affirmatively.
- To permit; to admit.
- To admit; to concede; to make allowance or abatement.
- To take a possibility into account; make allowance.
- To offer a possibility; admit.
- To assert; declare.
- To think; suppose.
- To admit; concede.
- To grant as a discount or in exchange.
- To plan for in case of need.
- To make provision for; assign.
- To permit to have.
- To permit the presence of.
- To let do or happen; permit.
ACCEPT vs ALLOW: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To show favoritism.
- To agree that a writ or process shall be considered as regularly served, when it has not been.
- To agree (on the part of the drawee) to pay it when due.
- In a deliberate body, to receive in acquittance of a duty imposed. [This makes it the property of the body, and the question is then on its adoption.]
- To receive as obligatory and promise to pay.
- To take by the mind; to understand; as, How are these words to be accepted?
- To receive or admit and agree to; to assent to.
- To receive with favor; to approve.
- To receive with a consenting mind (something offered); ; -- often followed by of.
- To grant license to; to permit; to consent to.
- To grant (something) as a deduction or an addition; esp. to abate or deduct.
- To own or acknowledge; to accept as true; to concede; to accede to an opinion
- To grant, give, admit, accord, afford, or yield; to let one have
- To sanction; to invest; to intrust.
- To like; to be suited or pleased with.
- To praise; to approve of; hence, to sanction.
ACCEPT vs ALLOW: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Consider right and proper
- React favorably to
- Respond favorably to
- Give an affirmative reply to
- Accepted.
- To receive in a particular sense; understand: as, how is this phrase to be accepted? In com., to acknowledge, by signature, as calling for payment, and thus to promise to pay: as, to accept a bill of exchange, that is, to acknowledge the obligation to pay it when due. See acceptance. In a deliberative body, to receive as a sufficient performance of the duty with which an officer or a committee has been charged; receive for further action: as, the report of the committee was accepted.
- To receive or admit and agree to; accede or assent to: as, to accept a treaty, a proposal, an amendment, an excuse: often followed by of: as, I accept of the terms.
- To listen favorably to; grant.
- To take (what presents itself or what befalls one); accommodate one's self to: as, to accept the situation.
- To take or receive (something offered); receive with approbation or favor: as, he made an offer which was accepted.
- Consent to, give permission; permit
- To permit; admit: with of: as, “of this allow,”
- To make abatement, concession, or provision: followed by for: as, to allow for the tare.
- Suffer is still more passive or reluctant than allow, and may imply that one does not prevent something, though it is contrary to one's feelings, judgment, or sense of right. To tolerate is to bear with something unpleasant: as, I would not tolerate such impertinence. Many things are tolerated, or suffered, or even allowed, that are not permitted, and many are permitted that are not really consented to, much less sanctioned.
- Consent to is formally to permit that which one has the power and generally some disposition to prevent; it implies the assumption of responsibility for that which is thus allowed. Sanction has a secondary sense of permitting with expressed or implied approbation: as, I cannot sanction such a course.
- Synonyms Allow, Permit, Consent to, Sanction, Suffer, Tolerate. Allow and permit are often used synonymously; but permit strictly denotes a formal or implied assent; allow, the absence of an intent, or even only of an attempt, to hinder.
- To assert, declare, say; or, of mental assertion, to mean, purpose, intend, or, simply, think: the concessive sense presented assertively.
- To invest; intrust.
- To grant special license or indulgence to.
- To grant permission to; permit: as, to allow a son to be absent.
- To abate or deduct; take into account; set apart: as, to allow so much for loss; to allow a sum for tare or leakage.
- To admit; concede; confess; own; acknowledge: as, to allow the right of private judgment; he allowed that he was wrong; he allowed it might be so.
- To grant, give, or yield; assign; afford: as, to allow a free passage.
- To praise or commend; approve, justify, or sanction.
ACCEPT vs ALLOW: RELATED WORDS
- Agree, Acknowledge, Acquiesce, Accede, Reject, Take on, Take over, Go for, Consent, Bear, Have, Swallow, Take, Assume, Admit
- Enable, Allow for, Take into account, Provide for, Set aside, Give up, Reserve, Admit, Earmark, Countenance, Grant, Appropriate, Leave, Permit, Let
ACCEPT vs ALLOW: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Embrace, Agree, Acknowledge, Acquiesce, Accede, Reject, Take on, Take over, Go for, Consent, Bear, Have, Swallow, Take, Admit
- Enables, Enabled, Enabling, Enable, Allow for, Take into account, Give up, Reserve, Admit, Earmark, Grant, Appropriate, Leave, Permit, Let
ACCEPT vs ALLOW: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Do you accept credit card for instant payments?
- We will accept home design blog guest posts.
- Details about which documents they accept are here.
- Mom, she is not going to accept this.
- Mr Edwin Tong Chun Fai: I accept that.
- National Native Title Tribunal must accept the application.
- The claim can include information and ideas you are asking readers to accept as true or actions you want them to accept and enact.
- You can accept by letting us know that you accept, or by asking us to start work.
- So I think it is clearly true, Congressman, that there is a different standard that we accept, and we accept our responsibility.
- Those solicitors that do accept cash will limit the amount they will accept to a few hundred pounds.
- Allow resubmission of form for the selected client.
- Jnd to allow flood control on the east.
- What does facing pages allow you to do?
- Allow to merge remote branches into local ones.
- Both degrees will allow nurses to become APRNs.
- This random number generator does not allow duplicates.
- Allow passwords to be transmitted without any encryption.
- Some traffic courts allow you to pay online.
- XML file to allow the device level tunnel, and your SSTP service should also be configured to allow computer certificates.
- Site via google forms allow them to develop their behavior expectations they allow teachers a classroom observation periods in this.
ACCEPT vs ALLOW: QUESTIONS
- Does Arnaldo Negron accept telehealth appointments?
- Does Kristina Jackson accept telehealth appointments?
- Does Pratt University accept international students?
- Does NYU accept International Baccalaureate credit?
- Does this publisher accept unsolicited manuscripts?
- Does Michael Szostak accept telehealth appointments?
- Does Dr Purushotham accept telehealth appointments?
- Do universities still accept international students?
- Does Michele Donato accept telehealth appointments?
- Do speakers who accept be yet to also accept have yet to?
- Does Zillow allow employees to telecommute permanently?
- Which image formats allow for transparent backgrounds?
- Which countries allow dual citizenship with Bulgaria?
- Does Southwest Airlines allow lap children tickets?
- Does the Dominican Republic allow dual citizenship?
- Does Texas foreclosure law allow deficiency judgments?
- Does Maven allow cyclic dependencies between projects?
- Should Texas community colleges allow campus carry?
- Which states allow pharmacists to prescribe contraceptives?
- Does Virginia allow criminal conversation lawsuits?