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Word Meanings - ACCOMMODATING - Book Publishers vocabulary database

Affording, or disposed to afford, accommodation; obliging; as an accommodating man, spirit, arrangement.

Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of ACCOMMODATING)

Related words: (words related to ACCOMMODATING)

  • URBANE
    Courteous in manners; polite; refined; elegant.
  • ACCEPTABLE
    Capable, worthy, or sure of being accepted or received with pleasure; pleasing to a receiver; gratifying; agreeable; welcome; as, an acceptable present, one acceptable to us.
  • POLITENESS
    1. High finish; smoothness; burnished elegance. Evelyn. 2. The quality or state of being polite; refinement of manners; urbanity; courteous behavior; complaisance; obliging attentions. Syn. -- Courtesy; good breeding; refinement; urbanity;
  • POLITE
    1. Smooth; polished. Rays of light falling on a polite surface. Sir I. Newton. 2. Smooth and refined in behavior or manners; well bred; courteous; complaisant; obliging; civil. He marries, bows at court, and grows polite. Pope. 3. Characterized
  • OBLIGABLE
    Acknowledging, or complying with, obligation; trustworthy. The main difference between people seems to be, that one man can come under obligations on which you can rely, -- is obligable; and another is not. Emerson.
  • CONSISTENTLY
    In a consistent manner.
  • OBLIGER
    One who, or that which, obliges. Sir H. Wotton.
  • AMIABLENESS
    The quality of being amiable; amiability.
  • AMIABLE
    friend, fr. amare to love. The meaning has been influenced by F. aimable, L. amabilis lovable, fr. amare to love. Cf. Amicable, 1. Lovable; lovely; pleasing. So amiable a prospect. Sir T. Herbert. 2. Friendly; kindly; sweet; gracious;
  • OBLIGEMENT
    Obligation. I will not resist, therefore, whatever it is, either of divine or human obligement, that you lay upon me. Milton.
  • PLEASER
    One who pleases or gratifies.
  • PLEASANT-TONGUED
    Of pleasing speech.
  • POLITICALLY
    1. In a political manner. 2. Politicly; artfully. Knolles.
  • COMPLIANT
    Yielding; bending; pliant; submissive. "The compliant boughs." Milton.
  • PLEASANTNESS
    The state or quality of being pleasant.
  • PLEASURIST
    A person devoted to worldly pleasure. Sir T. Browne.
  • CIVILIZED
    Reclaimed from savage life and manners; instructed in arts, learning, and civil manners; refined; cultivated. Sale of conscience and duty in open market is not reconcilable with the present state of civilized society. J. Quincy.
  • CIVILIZE
    1. To reclaim from a savage state; to instruct in the rules and customs of civilization; to educate; to refine. Yet blest that fate which did his arms dispose Her land to civilize, as to subdue. Dryden 2. To admit as suitable to a civilized state.
  • PLEASURER
    A pleasure seeker. Dickens.
  • DISAGREEABLENESS
    The state or quality of being; disagreeable; unpleasantness.
  • INGRATEFUL
    1. Ungrateful; thankless; unappreciative. Milton. He proved extremely false and ingrateful to me. Atterbury. 2. Unpleasing to the sense; distasteful; offensive. He gives . . . no ingrateful food. Milton. -- In"grate`ful*ly, adv. -- In"grate`ful*ness,
  • INCIVIL
    Uncivil; rude. Shak.
  • ANTHROPOLITE
    A petrifaction of the human body, or of any portion of it.
  • METROPOLITICAL
    Of or pertaining to a metropolis; being a metropolis; metropolitan; as, the metropolitical chair. Bp. Hall.
  • UNPOLITE
    Not polite; impolite; rude. -- Un`po*lite"ly, adv. -- Un`po*lite"ness, n.
  • UNCIVILIZATION
    The state of being uncivilized; savagery or barbarism.
  • IMPOLITICAL
    Impolitic. -- Im`po*lit"i*cal*ly, adv. Bacon.
  • OVERPLEASE
    To please excessively.

 

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