Agreeable to
to one’s liking; pleasing:
agreeable manners; an agreeable sensation.
willing or ready to or consent:
are you agreeable to my plans for sat-rday?
suitable; conformable (usually followed by to):
practice agreeable to theory.
adjective
pleasing; pleasant
prepared to consent
foll by to or with. in keeping; consistent: salaries agreeable with current trends
(foll by to) to one’s liking: he said the terms were not agreeable to him
adj.
late 14c., “to one’s liking,” from old french agreable (12c., modern french agréable) “pleasing, in agreement, consenting, thankful,” from agreer “to please” (see agree). related: agreeably.
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to one’s liking; pleasing: agreeable manners; an agreeable sensation. willing or ready to or consent: are you agreeable to my plans for sat-rday? suitable; conformable (usually followed by to): practice agreeable to theory. contemporary examples in kindergarten, agreeableness is indeed an -sset—and the extroverts are the good students. the new child-testing craze po bronson, ashley […]
- Agreeably
to one’s liking; pleasing: agreeable manners; an agreeable sensation. willing or ready to or consent: are you agreeable to my plans for sat-rday? suitable; conformable (usually followed by to): practice agreeable to theory. contemporary examples my duty, rather, is to “decide cases ‘agreeably to the const-tution and laws of the united states.’ ” clarence thomas […]
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to have the same views, emotions, etc.; harmonize in opinion or feeling (often followed by with): i don’t agree with you. to give consent; -ssent (often followed by to): he agreed to accompany the amb-ssador. do you agree to the conditions? to live in concord or without contention; get along together. to come to one […]
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a degree awarded by a french university, based on a compet-tive examination given by the state and qualifying the recipient for the highest teaching positions in a lycée or for the rank of professor in a school of law or medicine. historical examples while there he obtained the degree of licencie-es-lettres, and this was followed […]
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a degree awarded by a french university, based on a compet-tive examination given by the state and qualifying the recipient for the highest teaching positions in a lycée or for the rank of professor in a school of law or medicine.