Accord
51accord — Synonyms and related words: OK, accede to, accept, acceptance, acclamation, accommodate, accommodate with, accommodation, accord to, accordance, acquiescence, adapt, adapt to, adaptation, adaption, addition, adjunct, adjust, adjust to, adjustment …
52accord — [əˈkɔːd] noun [C] I a formal agreement between countries or groups • do sth of your own accord to do something without being asked, forced, or helped to do it[/ex] II verb [T] formal accord [əˈkɔːd] to give someone something such as power,… …
53accord — sąskambis statusas T sritis fizika atitikmenys: angl. accord; chord vok. Akkord, m rus. аккорд, m pranc. accord, m …
54accord — v. & n. v. 1 intr. (often foll. by with) (esp. of a thing) be in harmony; be consistent. 2 tr. a grant (permission, a request, etc.). b give (a welcome etc.). n. 1 agreement, consent. 2 harmony or harmonious correspondence in pitch, tone, colour …
55accord — See: OF ONE S OWN ACCORD or OF ONE S OWN FREE WILL …
56accord — See: OF ONE S OWN ACCORD or OF ONE S OWN FREE WILL …
57accord — 1. noun /əˈkɔːd,əˈkɔɹd/ a) Agreement or concurrence of opinion, will, or action. These all continued with one accord in prayer. b) A harmony in sound, pitch and tone; concord. Those sweet accords are even t …
58accord — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. i. harmonize, conform, agree. See agreement, assent. v. t. grant, bestow; concede. See giving. n. agreement. Ant., discord; withhold, deny. II (Roget s IV) n. Syn. harmony, understanding,… …
59accord — [12] In its original source, Vulgar Latin *accordāre, accord meant literally ‘heart toheart’ (from Latin ad ‘to’ and cord , the stem of cor ‘heart’). It passed into Old French as acorder, and was borrowed comparatively early into English, turning …
60accord — фр. [ако/р], англ. [эко/од] аккорд ◊ accord à l ouvert фр. [ако/р а л увэр] аккорд на откр. струнах …