0 present participle of acquiesce
1 to accept or agree to something, often unwillingly:
Reluctantly, he acquiesced to/in the plans.
Or at least that will be so if our reason for acquiescing in the regulatory regime is precisely that the regulations have this effect.
They sometimes found themselves acquiescing in strikes or even leading them.
By acquiescing in the deliberate forgetfulness of museum curators, it risks obscuring questions of major importance to the evolution of museums.
A chooses between challenging and acquiescing.
The government is more likely to respect rights when the cost of challenging alone unsuccessfully is close to the cost of acquiescing to a transgression on rights.
In other words, the likelihood that boundedly rational actors will misperceive payoff levels is greatest when the payoffs for challenging together and acquiescing to transgression are in their middle regions.
We need to know that, because we are acquiescing in something without knowing all the ground rules.
The unilateral action consisted of our not paying the money and their acquiescing in that.