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.
clarissa, volume 2 (of 9) samuel richardson
he was a sound tory, and an accepter of all established creeds.
hours in a library, volume i. (of iii.) leslie stephen
an englishman took the bill, and after a careful examination said he neither knew the drawer, the accepter, nor the backer.
the memoires of casanova, complete jacques casanova de seingalt
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- Accepting
amenable; open: she was always more accepting of coaching suggestions than her teammates. to take or receive (something offered); receive with approval or favor: to accept a present; to accept a proposal. to agree or consent to; accede to: to accept a treaty; to accept an apology. to respond or answer affirmatively to: to accept […]
- Accepting house
noun a financial inst-tution that guarantees a bill of exchange, as a result of which it can be discounted on more favourable terms historical examples the bill will be drawn on a london accepting house, to whom the english merchant is liable for its due payment. international finance hartley withers
- Acceptingly
amenable; open: she was always more accepting of coaching suggestions than her teammates.
- Acceptingness
amenable; open: she was always more accepting of coaching suggestions than her teammates.
- Acceptive
inclined to receive or ; receptive: she was seldom acceptive of my suggestions. reasonably satisfactory; : an acceptive mode of transportation. historical examples furthermore, i am an inceptive candidate and a susceptive candidate, and an acceptive candidate. through the outlooking gl-ss simeon strunsky