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acceptable    音标拼音: [æks'ɛptəbəl] [əks'ɛptəbəl]
a. 可接受的,合意的,合适的

可接受的,合意的,合适的

acceptable
可接受

acceptable
adj 1: worthy of acceptance or satisfactory; "acceptable levels
of radiation"; "performances varied from acceptable to
excellent" [ant: {unacceptable}]
2: judged to be in conformity with approved usage; "acceptable
English usage"
3: meeting requirements; "the step makes a satisfactory seat"
[synonym: {satisfactory}, {acceptable}]
4: adequate for the purpose; "the water was acceptable for
drinking"

Acceptable \Ac*cept"a*ble\ (-s[e^]pt"[.a]*b'l; 277), a. [F.
acceptable, L. acceptabilis, fr. acceptare.]
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.
[1913 Webster]

73 Moby Thesaurus words for "acceptable":
OK, adequate, admissible, adorable, agreeable, all right, alright,
appetizing, attractive, average, bearable, better than nothing,
commonplace, decent, delightful, desirable, eligible, endurable,
enfranchised, enviable, exciting, fair, fairish, fit, fitted, good,
good enough, goodish, grateful, gratifying, likable, lovable,
moderate, mouth-watering, not amiss, not bad, not half bad,
not so bad, okay, ordinary, passable, pleasant, pleasing,
presentable, pretty good, provocative, qualified, respectable,
satisfactory, satisfying, sufficient, suitable, supportable,
taking, tantalizing, tempting, tenable, tidy, to be desired,
tolerable, toothsome, unexceptionable, unexceptional,
unimpeachable, unobjectionable, viable, welcome, winning,
with voice, with vote, workmanlike, worth having, worthy



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  • Be acceptable to - WordReference Forums
    'Acceptable to' is not really used in this situation 'Approved by' and 'accepted by' are both perfectly fine, although I think 'approved' is a more typical usage As a side note, program and report are not proper nouns, so they should not be written with a capital letter
  • Totally Acceptable or Totally Unacceptable? - WordReference Forums
    4 Totally acceptable and natural a) See yous later! b) (Who ate the chocolate?) It was me c) I ain't interested in that d) I'm not bothered by that at all e) It wasn't I f) Who should I give this to? g) He's fatter than me I'm especially interested in the opinions of native speakers of English Thank you in advance for your comments
  • more friendly friendlier - WordReference Forums
    I also add that in AmE it is acceptable to use friendly both as an adverb and as a noun There may an example in which 'friendly' is an adverb, but ordinarily it is not an adverb It is an adjective In general the rule about the number of syllables predicts what English speakers say, but not always
  • Abbreviation of number - N, N°, Nr, Nbr, No? - WordReference Forums
    Yes you can, depending on the type of document I wouldn't suggest you use abbreviations in formal writings, but in tables, graphs, etc , abbreviations are acceptable
  • Can These are Those are be shortened as Thesere Thosere?
    Can " These are" "Those are " be shortened as " These're" "Those're"? I know some cannot be shortened Such as "This is" What about the above? No, I don't see this as appropriate in the written word -- may be acceptable in the spoken word
  • Media or the media - WordReference Forums
    Which one is correct? 1 Media is the communication outlets or tools used to store and deliver information or data 2 The Media is the communication outlets or tools used to store and deliver information or data
  • I am a university graduate, which the company wants to hire.
    I think (1) is acceptable, but (2) is not This is because in (1) “which” refers to “a person” and in this case, the verb in the relative clause needs a “to be” verb; "a university graduate" is not a particular person, but an abstract category
  • “As per” in informal language - WordReference Forums
    as lingobingo points out, as per is acceptable and not incorrect It is usually used in business or legal communications and not in casual conversation unless you enjoy trying to impress people
  • What do you call somebody who is unable to speak?
    Hello, I am wondering what you, native speakers, call people unable to speak I have found the following, but it says it is old fashioned Thank you!
  • copy cc someone in on on an email | WordReference Forums
    Thanks a lot for your reply, perpend Although you said you might say " Can you cc: me in your e-mail, " would both Can you copy me in on the email? and Can you cc me on the email? be acceptable? Any difference in meaning?





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