Acceptant
willingly or readily or receiving; receptive.
historical examples
where there is either no intrinsic value, or no acceptant capacity, there is no effectual value; that is to say, no wealth.
unto this last and other essays on political economy john ruskin
he awoke in the morning, acceptant of what he had done in the night.
cleo the magnificent louis zangwill
where the intrinsic value and acceptant capacity come together there is effectual value, or wealth.
unto this last and other essays on political economy john ruskin
adjective
receiving willingly; receptive
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the usual or meaning of a word, phrase, etc. favorable regard; approval. belief; acceptance as true or valid. historical examples he became a saint—an ascetic in the seventeenth-century acceptation of the word. southern spain a.f. calvert in its common, or generally received, acceptation, it implies two things. the politician out-witted samuel low it is also, […]
- Accepted masons
see under (def 2b). a member of a widely distributed secret order (free and accepted masons) having for its object mutual -ssistance and the promotion of brotherly love among its members. (lowercase) history/historical. one of a cl-ss of skilled stoneworkers of the middle ages, possessing secret signs and p-sswords. a member of a society composed […]
- Accepted pairing
a technique of advertising in which two or more competing products are compared in such a manner that certain good qualities are conceded but one product is made to appear clearly more beneficial or desirable than its compet-tors.
- Acceptee
a person who is , as for military service.
- Accepter
a person or thing that . historical examples il peut, conformment ce qui est rgl par l’article 44, accepter la remise de la contrebande qui lui est offerte par le navire arrt. international law. a treatise. volume ii (of 2) l-ssa francis oppenheim the giver and the accepter are princ-p-lly answerable in an unjust donation. […]