ac·cept\ik-ˈsept, ak- also ek-\
verb
: to receive or take (something offered)
: to take (something) as payment
: to be able or designed to take or hold (something)
Full Definition
transitive verb
1 a : to receive willingly <accept a gift>
b : to be able or designed to take or hold (something applied or added) <a surface that will not accept ink>
2 : to give admittance or approval to <accept her as one of the group>
3 a : to endure without protest or reaction <accept poor living conditions>
b : to regard as proper, normal, or inevitable <the idea is widely accepted>
c : to recognize as true : believe <refused to accept the explanation>
4 a : to make a favorable response to <accept an offer>
b : to agree to undertake (a responsibility) <accept a job>
5 : to assume an obligation to pay; also : to take in payment <we don't accept personal checks>
6 : to receive (a legislative report) officiallyintransitive verb
: to receive favorably something offered — usually used with of <a heart more disposed to accept of his — Jane Austen>
ac·cept·ing·ly \-ˈsep-tiŋ-lē\ adverb
ac·cept·ing·ness \-tiŋ-nəs\ noun
Examples
They offered him the job, and he accepted it.
They offered him the job, and he accepted.
The store doesn't accept credit cards.
Origin: Middle English, from Anglo-French accepter, from Latin acceptare, frequentative of accipere to receive, from ad- + capere to take — more at heave.
First use: 14th century
Synonyms: take, have
Antonyms: decline, deny, disallow, disapprove, negative, refuse, reject, spurn, turn down, veto
英语小点心:接受怎么说?(韦氏词典权威解释)














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