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词汇 accommodate
释义

Definition of accommodate in English:

accommodate

verb əˈkɒmədeɪtəˈkɑməˌdeɪt
[with object]
  • 1(of a building or other area) provide lodging or sufficient space for.

    (空间,尤指建筑物)容纳;为…提供住宿

    the cottages accommodate up to six people

    小屋可容多达六人居住。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Ko Olina Marina is a modern 270-slip facility accommodating boats up to 150 feet with all the comforts of home - no decaying docks here.
    • Your average busy bar accommodates a couple of hundred people in an enclosed and poorly ventilated area.
    • This has allowed the creation of a large reception space accommodating the living room, dining area and kitchen.
    • The office accommodates two recently merged law firms in a space that expresses the new firm's identity.
    • Meanwhile, new buildings on the four hectare site will accommodate another 60 flats.
    • Statistics show the four-story mall accommodates a total of 11 shops and some 120 shopkeepers.
    • The refurbished Main House now accommodates the Sixth Form and the Senior pupils.
    • A 336-square-foot guest suite above the garage accommodates visitors for extended stays.
    • The chapel could only accommodate a fraction of the people and each mass was dedicated to all the victims.
    • This area also accommodates a small guest toilet and the stairs to the first floor.
    • Today that ancestral house accommodates a dance academy run by my daughter.
    • The local government has thus far built shelters to accommodate people from the area.
    • Scattered across 180 acres of tranquil hills, valleys and brooks are cottages and rooms accommodating guests of all categories and tastes.
    • The houses in Atlantic View once accommodated British Coastguard officers.
    • An old cooperage behind the Scottish Fisheries Museum accommodates Peter Jukes' lauded seafood restaurant.
    • Some of the pigs might also go to nearby farm buildings if neighbouring farms could accommodate them, he added.
    • The hospital also accommodates visitors to the Irish Kidney Association's Respite Centre in Tramore.
    • The bar is always fifteen deep, the dancefloor accommodates 250 people but probably packs more and the lighting is very, very dark.
    • At present there are eight public off-street car parks accommodating 935 cars, with seven private car parks with over 600 spaces.
    • This room is at the heart of the property; a recessed area accommodates an oil-fired Rayburn range while there is a cut slate floor and work surface.
    Synonyms
    lodge, house, put up, billet, quarter, board, take in, provide shelter for, shelter, give a bed to, give someone a roof over their head, provide a roof over someone's head, harbour, make room for, give accommodation to, provide with accommodation, provide accommodation for
    hold, take, fit, seat, have room for
  • 2Fit in with the wishes or needs of.

    顺应;迎合

    any language must accommodate new concepts

    任何语言都必须能表达新的概念。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The language of this handbook accommodates the needs of design and production professionals and students.
    • Not for Mandarin, but for the other local languages it is designed to accommodate.
    • The new regime has no time for the tiresome (if unselfish) business of accommodating the wishes of other festivals.
    • The system cannot revolve around any one case, but must try to accommodate the needs of all cases.
    • This has led to religious decline, but it has also led to religious reformation with churches accommodating change in diverse ways.
    • Work must also be restructured in such a way that it accommodates caregiving, through a shorter workweek and more flexible scheduling, for example.
    • Difference of opinion is good but we must learn to accommodate each other's point of view at the same time.
    • At the ASEM summit held some weeks ago in the South Korean capital the protocol officers had difficulties in accommodating all the wishes for personal encounters.
    • It is difficult to accommodate the wishes of all in the community but we do try to get it right as far as we possibly can.
    • The building supports environmentally minded commuters by providing showers for bicyclers and accommodating employees who wish to take the bus.
    • Many think the gospel can only succeed if it accommodates the wishes of the world.
    • Because of Johnson's strong family ties, the Falcons have gone the extra mile in accommodating his wish to spend the majority of the offseason with his wife and two children.
    • In the case of genuine absence, you must see if you can accommodate the needs of the employee.
    • He's griping about the team not accommodating his wish to be traded.
    • The price often seems to rise inexorably as more voices must be accommodated at every turn, especially as the EU enlarges.
    • The one issue they all agree on is that the work world must change to accommodate families.
    • Is this mirrored in the appearance of the ‘esteemed male guest’ who must be accommodated at all costs?
    • Certain other measures have been adopted to accommodate the claimant's wishes.
    • The daguerreotypist was expected to accommodate the wishes of his clients.
    • Every effort should be made to accommodate the wishes of women and their partners.
    Synonyms
    help, fit in with, allow for, assist, aid, lend a hand to, oblige, serve, do someone a service, meet the needs/wants of, do someone a good turn, favour, do someone a favour, cater for, indulge, pander to, humour, gratify, satisfy
    1. 2.1accommodate tono object Adapt to.
      making users accommodate to the realities of today's marketplace

      使用户适应今天的市场现状。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Empires generally expect neighboring states and dependencies to accept their power and accommodate to it.
      • How can society hope to accommodate to men and women alike pursuing their public ambitions while maintaining a stable domestic life?
      • Urban society will have to accommodate to those prices, and with the majority of people living in a sprawling urban environment, we're going to have a hard time.
      • Its deeply territorial nature is incompletely accommodated to the disciplined consumption demanded of a truly global consumer system.
      • The most important choice you'll ever make is how you accommodate to this at this point and I'll promise you the worst possible thing we can ever do, is have suffering with no meaning and no purpose.
      • Common sense and the sense of self-protectiveness tell us to accommodate to what we cannot change.
      • I have always thought that the best way to begin to accommodate to new circumstances is to learn to laugh in them.
      • Thirdly, experiencing the changes that are going on at a physical level as the body accommodates to new life and prepares for birth can lead to a new type of relationship with your body.
      • The report also looks at measures which will physically ‘control’ rat runs, bring in public transport routes away from congested areas and a flexible plan which can accommodate to differing situations.
      • Now all attitudes will have to be accommodated to ALP policy.
      • What we do not expect, however, are the speed and extent to which many of these victims accommodate to their new circumstances.
      • Human history is a history of progress - of forging ahead and improving our lot by changing our circumstances, not accommodating to them.
      • The Tokyo tribunal accommodated to these sentiments by granting Emperor Hirohito immunity from prosecution.
      • Kissinger assumed a key role in state decision-making during the 1970s and attempted to take the USA in a realist direction of accommodating to its declining power by non-ideological calculations.
      • If you let them worry about you more, you get stronger at your best techniques and they have to accommodate to your game plan.
      • As in the far more lucrative arena of the visual arts, dance lost its oppositional fervor as it accommodated to both political and economic realities.
      • Some still hold these positions, and a few have even accommodated to changing times and become sound, although never outstanding, university administrators.
      • He noted, ‘Neighbourhoods flourish by accommodating to change, not by saying no to it.’
      • Girls end up more accommodated to academia and flock to college, which may need to do affirmative action for males to keep the male-to-female ratio in balance.
      • This idea can be easily accommodated to any size of file folders.
      Synonyms
      adjust, adapt, attune, accustom, get (someone) accustomed, get (someone) used, habituate, acclimatize, assimilate, acculturate
      familiarize someone/oneself with, find one's way around, come to terms with, come to accept, learn to live with
      integrate, domesticate
      find one's feet, get one's bearings, become naturalized, become seasoned
      North American acclimate

Derivatives

  • accommodative

  • adjective əˈkɒmədeɪtɪvəˈkɑməˌdeɪdɪv
    • In the first phase this is likely to be relatively accommodative; however in the second phase, when companies have had the chance to gain experience, the allocations are likely to be more restrictive.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • I know I have to be very natural and accommodative and appeal to the interviewee as a commoner and not a film star’.
      • The Federal Reserve said in a statement that its monetary policy ‘remains accommodative,’ suggesting that it would raise the rate further.
      • Markets are coming to grips with the fact that accommodative US monetary policy has not only helped produce a solid recovery but has rekindled inflation, he said.
      • Well, I think we have been very loose with these people, we have been accommodative with them right now.
      • Their accommodative nature is now fuelling inflation levels.
      • Now that the employment numbers show a decisive upward move and we need no longer maintain a policy stance designed to counter deflation, the worry is that interest rate policy is too accommodative and that the economy needs to slow.
      • Thus the Fed, far from maintaining its accommodative mode, is poised to raise rates at the end of this month.
      • Dookeran said T & T's current monetary policy stance of being reactive and accommodative was full of risk and might even open up the issue as to the vulnerability of our banking sector.
      • ‘The stance of monetary policy remains accommodative and conditions in financial markets appear supportive of an increased pace of activity,’ he said.
      • In the first phase this has proved to be relatively accommodative; however, in the second phase when companies have had the chance to gain experience, the allocations are likely to be more restrictive.
      • Susilo said that the new draft of the emergency law will be far more accommodative and responsive to human rights values, the prerequisite in any democratic country.
      • The approach was accommodative and reconciliatory.
      • Post-operative physiotherapy has to be accommodative to let muscles heal.
      • THE FED HAS TAKEN POLICY from restrictive to accommodative in less than five months, providing stimulus that will begin to hit the economy this fall, not to mention the coming impact from tax cuts.
      • Earlier on Sunday, US Treasury Secretary John Snow called on Europe to adopt ‘more accommodative monetary and fiscal policies‘.
      • This phrase was replaced with a statement that the Fed would be patient in removing its accommodative monetary policy.
      • The Fed said recently that monetary policy can be accommodative for some time.
      • The European Central Bank should maintain a ‘very accommodative stance’ and certainly not raise interest rates any time soon, Cotis said.
      • And Alan Greenspan is extremely accommodative.

Origin

Mid 16th century: from Latin accommodat- 'made fitting', from the verb accommodare, from ad- 'to' + commodus 'fitting'.

  • The source of accommodate is Latin accommodare ‘make fitting, fit one thing to another’, formed from commodus ‘fit’. It came into English with the basic Latin sense, and through the idea of finding something that fitted someone's needs, had developed the sense of ‘provide lodgings for’ by the early 18th century. Latin commodus is also the base of commode (mid 18th century) something ‘fit, convenient’, and originally used of a chest of drawers before becoming a seat containing a chamber pot in the early 19th century and of commodity (Late Middle English) originally something useful.

Definition of accommodate in US English:

accommodate

verbəˈkɑməˌdeɪtəˈkäməˌdāt
[with object]
  • 1(of physical space, especially a building) provide lodging or sufficient space for.

    (空间,尤指建筑物)容纳;为…提供住宿

    the cabins accommodate up to 6 people

    小屋可容多达六人居住。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • This has allowed the creation of a large reception space accommodating the living room, dining area and kitchen.
    • A 336-square-foot guest suite above the garage accommodates visitors for extended stays.
    • The hospital also accommodates visitors to the Irish Kidney Association's Respite Centre in Tramore.
    • This room is at the heart of the property; a recessed area accommodates an oil-fired Rayburn range while there is a cut slate floor and work surface.
    • The bar is always fifteen deep, the dancefloor accommodates 250 people but probably packs more and the lighting is very, very dark.
    • Ko Olina Marina is a modern 270-slip facility accommodating boats up to 150 feet with all the comforts of home - no decaying docks here.
    • This area also accommodates a small guest toilet and the stairs to the first floor.
    • An old cooperage behind the Scottish Fisheries Museum accommodates Peter Jukes' lauded seafood restaurant.
    • At present there are eight public off-street car parks accommodating 935 cars, with seven private car parks with over 600 spaces.
    • Scattered across 180 acres of tranquil hills, valleys and brooks are cottages and rooms accommodating guests of all categories and tastes.
    • Your average busy bar accommodates a couple of hundred people in an enclosed and poorly ventilated area.
    • Some of the pigs might also go to nearby farm buildings if neighbouring farms could accommodate them, he added.
    • The local government has thus far built shelters to accommodate people from the area.
    • The houses in Atlantic View once accommodated British Coastguard officers.
    • Statistics show the four-story mall accommodates a total of 11 shops and some 120 shopkeepers.
    • The refurbished Main House now accommodates the Sixth Form and the Senior pupils.
    • The office accommodates two recently merged law firms in a space that expresses the new firm's identity.
    • Today that ancestral house accommodates a dance academy run by my daughter.
    • The chapel could only accommodate a fraction of the people and each mass was dedicated to all the victims.
    • Meanwhile, new buildings on the four hectare site will accommodate another 60 flats.
    Synonyms
    lodge, house, put up, billet, quarter, board, take in, provide shelter for, shelter, give a bed to, give someone a roof over their head, provide a roof over someone's head, harbour, make room for, give accommodation to, provide with accommodation, provide accommodation for
    hold, take, fit, seat, have room for
  • 2Fit in with the wishes or needs of.

    顺应;迎合

    any language must accommodate new concepts

    任何语言都必须能表达新的概念。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • He's griping about the team not accommodating his wish to be traded.
    • Many think the gospel can only succeed if it accommodates the wishes of the world.
    • The language of this handbook accommodates the needs of design and production professionals and students.
    • This has led to religious decline, but it has also led to religious reformation with churches accommodating change in diverse ways.
    • It is difficult to accommodate the wishes of all in the community but we do try to get it right as far as we possibly can.
    • The new regime has no time for the tiresome (if unselfish) business of accommodating the wishes of other festivals.
    • The system cannot revolve around any one case, but must try to accommodate the needs of all cases.
    • Because of Johnson's strong family ties, the Falcons have gone the extra mile in accommodating his wish to spend the majority of the offseason with his wife and two children.
    • Work must also be restructured in such a way that it accommodates caregiving, through a shorter workweek and more flexible scheduling, for example.
    • Difference of opinion is good but we must learn to accommodate each other's point of view at the same time.
    • The building supports environmentally minded commuters by providing showers for bicyclers and accommodating employees who wish to take the bus.
    • Certain other measures have been adopted to accommodate the claimant's wishes.
    • The daguerreotypist was expected to accommodate the wishes of his clients.
    • At the ASEM summit held some weeks ago in the South Korean capital the protocol officers had difficulties in accommodating all the wishes for personal encounters.
    • Every effort should be made to accommodate the wishes of women and their partners.
    • The price often seems to rise inexorably as more voices must be accommodated at every turn, especially as the EU enlarges.
    • Is this mirrored in the appearance of the ‘esteemed male guest’ who must be accommodated at all costs?
    • In the case of genuine absence, you must see if you can accommodate the needs of the employee.
    • The one issue they all agree on is that the work world must change to accommodate families.
    • Not for Mandarin, but for the other local languages it is designed to accommodate.
    Synonyms
    help, fit in with, allow for, assist, aid, lend a hand to, oblige, serve, do someone a service, meet the needs of, meet the wants of, do someone a good turn, favour, do someone a favour, cater for, indulge, pander to, humour, gratify, satisfy
    1. 2.1accommodate tono object Adapt to.
      making consumers accommodate to the realities of today's marketplace

      使用户适应今天的市场现状。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Now all attitudes will have to be accommodated to ALP policy.
      • The Tokyo tribunal accommodated to these sentiments by granting Emperor Hirohito immunity from prosecution.
      • The report also looks at measures which will physically ‘control’ rat runs, bring in public transport routes away from congested areas and a flexible plan which can accommodate to differing situations.
      • Girls end up more accommodated to academia and flock to college, which may need to do affirmative action for males to keep the male-to-female ratio in balance.
      • As in the far more lucrative arena of the visual arts, dance lost its oppositional fervor as it accommodated to both political and economic realities.
      • Its deeply territorial nature is incompletely accommodated to the disciplined consumption demanded of a truly global consumer system.
      • If you let them worry about you more, you get stronger at your best techniques and they have to accommodate to your game plan.
      • The most important choice you'll ever make is how you accommodate to this at this point and I'll promise you the worst possible thing we can ever do, is have suffering with no meaning and no purpose.
      • Common sense and the sense of self-protectiveness tell us to accommodate to what we cannot change.
      • I have always thought that the best way to begin to accommodate to new circumstances is to learn to laugh in them.
      • He noted, ‘Neighbourhoods flourish by accommodating to change, not by saying no to it.’
      • What we do not expect, however, are the speed and extent to which many of these victims accommodate to their new circumstances.
      • Human history is a history of progress - of forging ahead and improving our lot by changing our circumstances, not accommodating to them.
      • Urban society will have to accommodate to those prices, and with the majority of people living in a sprawling urban environment, we're going to have a hard time.
      • Thirdly, experiencing the changes that are going on at a physical level as the body accommodates to new life and prepares for birth can lead to a new type of relationship with your body.
      • This idea can be easily accommodated to any size of file folders.
      • Empires generally expect neighboring states and dependencies to accept their power and accommodate to it.
      • Kissinger assumed a key role in state decision-making during the 1970s and attempted to take the USA in a realist direction of accommodating to its declining power by non-ideological calculations.
      • Some still hold these positions, and a few have even accommodated to changing times and become sound, although never outstanding, university administrators.
      • How can society hope to accommodate to men and women alike pursuing their public ambitions while maintaining a stable domestic life?
      Synonyms
      adjust, adapt, attune, accustom, get accustomed, get someone accustomed, get used, get someone used, habituate, acclimatize, assimilate, acculturate

Origin

Mid 16th century: from Latin accommodat- ‘made fitting’, from the verb accommodare, from ad- ‘to’ + commodus ‘fitting’.

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