0 past simple and past participle of acquiesce --
1 to accept or agree to something, often unwillingly: --
Reluctantly, he acquiesced to/in the plans.
Once again the worker shareholders, and sometimes their widows who still held the shares, acquiesced.
Is it to be said that he acquiesced in them because he could not get his tenant to appeal against them?
Then how on earth can he ever have acquiesced in it or otherwise?
He has apparently acquiesced in it and there is no guarantee that he will get any better results.
The skippers pleaded guilty and acquiesced in the fines imposed.
A predominance of cooperative or neutral responses to dependent positioning by the staff would suggest that the residents have acquiesced to being in a dependent role.
Even the defense acquiesced to this fact.
However, they acquiesced with 'family' decisions to maintain non-working young adult women ascribing such decisions to the men in the family.