Accede in a sentence as a verb

You are essentially demanding that this man accede your preferred experience.

So if the higher up is from the same community, there is a higher likelihood that the cop will accede to his request.

Look at the size of the list, and ask yourself if all those people would accede to a request to release their name and status as investors to the public.

France can't summon the US ambassador to ream him out about NSA surveillance one day, and effectively accede to NSA surveillance the next.

Since they desire to do this, they will not accede to Mailpile's desired world, where Mailpile gets 100% of the money on day 1 and then Paypal can seek recovery on day 120 or 365 if a chargeback comes in.

Given Russia's history of using its energy dominance with Europe as leverage it seems unwise for China to accede too much control with regards to critical resources to it.

I have to confess that my knowledge of the history of weapons is rudimentary, so I gladly accede to your point; my previous remark only concerned Soviet geopolitics as it stood in 1947 vs. 1920.

Some people hope that the EU will cut Switzerland's access to the common market which will force it to officially accede to the European Union and have a saying in the rules and regulations it has to adopt anyway.

If we're speaking purely in terms of debate for purposes of Aumann-theoretic truth-finding, then there's many other things you can do to accede to someone else's point than by simply saying some moral equivalent to "Hear, hear!

Why, when founders have the power to assert more control, should they voluntarily accede to a historic policy the keeps them in handcuffs and leaves them with basically an all-or-nothing proposition in whether they ever get anything significant out of the venture?

How do you distinguish between someone who felt empowered to make a choice and someone who was socialized to accede to others' needs first?In general I'd probably be skeptical of someone who said that raising children was more fulfilling than any other pursuit, but what's more important than that is that there should be a choice in the first place.

Accede definitions

verb

yield to another's wish or opinion; "The government bowed to the military pressure"

See also: submit defer

verb

take on duties or office; "accede to the throne"

See also: enter

verb

to agree or express agreement; "The Maestro assented to the request for an encore"

See also: assent acquiesce