0 to accept or agree to something, often unwillingly:
Reluctantly, he acquiesced to/in the plans.
1 to accept or agree to something, often without really wanting to:
However, it is better to acquiesce and live under submission than to endure the cost of challenging alone.
It becomes easier to acquiesce than to risk appearing unprofessional with your publisher or readers, especially in a business when the deadline was yesterday.
Where authority is legitimate, it is both a simple duty and a natural inclination to acquiesce in it.
Before 'premature transnationalism' developed fully into its mature phase as liberal internationalism, transanationalism had again mutated so as to acquiesce to the imperial order.
Or at least that will be so if our reason for acquiescing in the regulatory regime is precisely that the regulations have this effect.
Instead, it acquiesced in judicial reformist activity until legislation on the subject began in the 1920s.
On the other hand, if students acquiesce to the charade, they are cooperating with dishonesty and undermining one of medicine's pivotal values.
Or at least that will be so if we acquiesce in this sort of representation, because of how it serves our preferences.
中文繁体
默認, 默許, 默然同意…
More中文简体
默认, 默许, 默然同意…
MoreEspañol
consentir, consentir (en)…
MorePortuguês
consentir…
MoreTürk dili
kabullenmek, istemeden razı olmak, ses çıkarmamak…
MoreFrançais
acquiescer…
MoreČeština
souhlasit, svolit…
MoreDansk
indvillige, føje sig…
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