0 past simple and past participle of accommodate --
2 to give what is needed to someone: --
3 (of an eye) to change the shape of the lens in order to focus (= see clearly) --
Uncertainty, a dominant influence in diagnostics and prognostics, must be accommodated and managed.
The home accommodated 135 residents, and their ages ranged from 60 to 90 years.
Accepting that pain and illness are involved can, however, be very well accommodated in the model, and this is particularly true for the housing factors.
A strong version would present these elements as non-negotiable social givens with which innovations must be accommodated or else be rejected.
The value of each individual firm is unaffected by the business cycle because it is entirely accommodated through entry and exit.
Because the targets of a relation may be either individual objects, or sets or lists of objects, information with more than one dimension is accommodated.
A finite number of different consumer types could be accommodated by appropriately stacking the variables and the dynamic system describing the learning dynamics.
It should come as no surprise that code-switching cannot be accommodated within available well-defined linguistic systems as linguists have understood them.