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Sunday - May 27, 2012

Webster's Unabridged Dictionary: Library in Itself

The dictionary's 1913 edition of the 1900 International, renamed Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, has in modern times been used in various free online resources, as its copyright lapsed and it became public domain.
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Accord

Accord (accord)
n.((?))
Ac*cord"
[OE. acord, accord, OF. acort, acorde, F. accord, fr. OF. acorder, F. accorder. See Accord, v. t.]
  1. Agreement or concurrence of opinion, will, or action; harmony of mind; consent; assent.

    A mediator of an accord and peace between them.
    Bacon.

    These all continued with one accord in prayer.
    Acts i. 14.

  2. Harmony of sounds; agreement in pitch and tone; concord; as, the accord of tones.

    Those sweet accords are even the angels' lays.
    Sir J. Davies.

  3. Agreement, harmony, or just correspondence of things; as, the accord of light and shade in painting.
  4. Voluntary or spontaneous motion or impulse to act; -- preceded by own; as, of one's own accord.

    That which groweth of its own accord of thy harvest thou shalt not reap.
    Lev. xxv. 5.

    Of his own accord he went unto you.
    2 Cor. vii. 17.

  5. An agreement between parties in controversy, by which satisfaction for an injury is stipulated, and which, when executed, bars a suit.
    Blackstone.

    With one accord, with unanimity.

    They rushed with one accord into the theater.
    Acts xix. 29.


Accord

Accord (accord)
v. t.
Ac*cord"
  1. To make to agree or correspond; to suit one thing to another; to adjust; -- followed by to.
    [R.]

    Her hands accorded the lute's music to the voice.
    Sidney.

  2. To bring to an agreement, as persons; to reconcile; to settle, adjust, harmonize, or compose, as things; as, to accord suits or controversies.

    When they were accorded from the fray.
    Spenser.

    All which particulars, being confessedly knotty and difficult can never be accorded but by a competent stock of critical learning.
    South.

  3. To grant as suitable or proper; to concede; to award; as, to accord to one due praise.
    "According his desire." Spenser.

Accord

Accord (accord)
v. i.
Ac*cord"
  1. To agree; to correspond; to be in harmony; -- followed by with, formerly also by to; as, his disposition accords with his looks.

    My heart accordeth with my tongue.
    Shak.

    Thy actions to thy words accord.
    Milton.

  2. To agree in pitch and tone.













Webster's Unabridged Dictionary: Library in Itself

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May 27, 2012
[12:00:22 AM] (PDT)


  0.014527082443237|May 27, 2012 => 11:55 pm