Need another word that means the same as “accord”? Find 54 synonyms and 30 related words for “accord” in this overview.
The synonyms of “Accord” are: agree, concord, consort, fit in, harmonise, harmonize, allot, grant, give, tender, present, award, hand, vouchsafe, concede, yield, cede, correspond, tally, match up, concur, coincide, be in agreement, be consistent, equate, be in harmony, be compatible, be consonant, be congruous, be in tune, dovetail, correlate, agreement, accordance, conformity, pact, treaty, settlement, deal, entente, concordat, protocol, compact, contract, convention, consensus, unanimity, harmony, unison, unity, concert, rapport, congruence
Accord as a Noun
Definitions of "Accord" as a noun
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “accord” as a noun can have the following definitions:
- Agreement or harmony.
- An official agreement or treaty.
- Concurrence of opinion.
- Harmony of people's opinions or actions or characters.
- Sympathetic compatibility.
- A written agreement between two states or sovereigns.
Synonyms of "Accord" as a noun (22 Words)
accordance | Concurrence of opinion. There is good accordance between the values. |
agreement | Harmony or accordance in opinion or feeling. Agreement between experimental observations and theory. |
compact | A mass of powdered metal compacted together in preparation for sintering. A wide selection of films is available for your 35 mm compact. |
concert | Agreement or harmony. Critics inability to describe with any precision and concert the characteristics of literature. |
concord | The determination of grammatical inflection on the basis of word relations. A pact of peace and concord. |
concordat | An agreement or treaty, especially one between the Vatican and a secular government relating to matters of mutual interest. Napoleon I s concordat with the papacy. |
conformity | Correspondence in form or appearance. Their financial statements are in conformity with generally accepted accounting practices. |
congruence | Agreement or harmony; compatibility. The results show quite good congruence with recent studies. |
consensus | Agreement in the judgment or opinion reached by a group as a whole. Those rights and obligations are based on an unstated consensus. |
contract | The highest bid becomes the contract setting the number of tricks that the bidder must make. South can make the contract with correct play. |
convention | Orthodoxy as a consequence of being conventional. To attract the best patrons the movie houses had to ape the conventions and the standards of theatres. |
deal | The set of hands dealt to the players. A deal of trouble. |
entente | A friendly understanding between political powers. The unsuccessful scheme to lure Greece into the war on the side of the entente. |
harmony | The quality of forming a pleasing and consistent whole. Delightful cities where old and new blend in harmony. |
pact | A formal agreement between individuals or parties. The country negotiated a trade pact with the US. |
protocol | An amendment or addition to a treaty or convention. Protocol forbids the prince from making any public statement in his defence. |
rapport | A relationship of mutual understanding or trust and agreement between people. She had an instant rapport with animals. |
settlement | The action of allowing or helping people to establish settlements. Most suppliers will offer early settlement discounts. |
treaty | A formally concluded and ratified agreement between states. The two Presidents signed a ten year treaty of solidarity. |
unanimity | Everyone being of one mind. There is almost complete unanimity on this issue. |
unison | Corresponding exactly. Singing in unison. |
unity | Each of the three dramatic principles requiring limitation of the supposed time of a drama to that occupied in acting it or to a single day unity of time use of one scene throughout unity of place and concentration on the development of a single plot unity of action. He took measures to insure the territorial unity of Croatia. |
Usage Examples of "Accord" as a noun
- We are in accord with your proposal.
- Opposition groups refused to sign the accord.
- The government and the rebels are in accord on one point.
- A peace accord.
Accord as a Verb
Definitions of "Accord" as a verb
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “accord” as a verb can have the following definitions:
- (of a concept or fact) be harmonious or consistent with.
- Give or grant someone (power, status, or recognition.
- Go together.
- Allow to have.
Synonyms of "Accord" as a verb (32 Words)
agree | Reach agreement about something after negotiation. Everybody agrees that jobs will go. |
allot | Give or apportion (something) to someone. I was allotted a little room in the servants block. |
award | Give as judged due or on the basis of merit. A 3 5 per cent pay rise was awarded to staff. |
be compatible | Be identical to; be someone or something. |
be congruous | Occupy a certain position or area. |
be consistent | Have life, be alive. |
be consonant | Have life, be alive. |
be in agreement | Be priced at. |
be in harmony | Happen, occur, take place. |
be in tune | Work in a specific place, with a specific subject, or in a specific function. |
cede | Give over; surrender or relinquish to the physical control of another. In 1874 the islands were ceded to Britain. |
coincide | Occur at the same time. On Friday afternoons we generally coincided. |
concede | Be willing to concede. He took an early lead which he never conceded. |
concord | Arrange by concord or agreement. Both philosophers concord on this point. |
concur | Happen or occur at the same time; coincide. That s right the chairman concurred. |
consort | Keep company with; hang out with. You chose to consort with the enemy. |
correlate | To bear a reciprocal or mutual relation. We should correlate general trends in public opinion with trends in the content of television news. |
correspond | Be equivalent or parallel, in mathematics. My Russian pen pal and I have been corresponding for several years. |
dovetail | Join together by means of a dovetail. Flights that dovetail with the working day. |
equate | Cause (two or more things) to be the same in quantity or value. That sum equates to half a million pounds today. |
fit in | Satisfy a condition or restriction. |
give | Give entirely to a specific person activity or cause. Can I give you the children for the weekend. |
grant | Give over; surrender or relinquish to the physical control of another. Grant a degree. |
hand | Hold the hand of someone in order to guide them in a specified direction. Hand the elderly lady into the taxi. |
harmonise | Bring into consonance or accord. |
harmonize | Add notes to (a melody) to produce harmony. The colors don t harmonize. |
match up | Be equal to in quality or ability. |
present | Present somebody with something usually to accuse or criticize. We cannot represent this knowledge to our formal reason. |
tally | Agree or correspond. Their signatures should tally with their names on the register. |
tender | Make a tender of in legal settlements. Tenderize meat. |
vouchsafe | Give or grant (something) to (someone) in a gracious or condescending manner. It is a blessing vouchsafed him by heaven. |
yield | Be fatally overwhelmed. This year s crop yielded 1 000 bushels of corn. |
Usage Examples of "Accord" as a verb
- The powers accorded to the head of state.
- His views accorded well with those of Merivale.
- The national assembly accorded the General more power.
Associations of "Accord" (30 Words)
accede | Yield to another’s wish or opinion. Elizabeth I acceded to the throne in 1558. |
agree | Show grammatical agreement. Everybody agrees that jobs will go. |
agreed | Discussed or negotiated and then accepted by all parties. We are agreed that what is needed is a catchy title. |
agreement | The condition of having the same number, gender, case, and/or person as another word. The governments failed to reach agreement. |
approbation | Approval or praise. A term of approbation. |
approval | The formal act of approving. His decision merited the approval of any sensible person. |
approve | Give sanction to. I don t approve of romance. |
assent | The expression of approval or agreement. A loud murmur of assent. |
coincide | Go with, fall together. The members of the College coincide in this opinion. |
compromise | Make a compromise arrive at a compromise. A compromise between the freedom of the individual and the need to ensure orderly government. |
concord | Arrange the words of a text so as to create a concordance. A pact of peace and concord. |
concur | Be in accord; be in agreement. The authors concurred with the majority. |
concurrence | A state of cooperation. The number of possible concurrences in the diagram. |
conform | Adapt or conform oneself to new or different conditions. The countryside should conform to a certain idea of the picturesque. |
conformance | Correspondence in form or appearance. Conformance testing. |
consensus | A general agreement. Those rights and obligations are based on an unstated consensus. |
consent | Agree to do something. No change may be made without the consent of all the partners. |
correspond | Communicate by exchanging letters, emails, or other messages. Margaret corresponded with him until his death. |
covenant | Enter into a covenant or formal agreement. There was a covenant between them that her name was never to be mentioned. |
pact | A written agreement between two states or sovereigns. The country negotiated a trade pact with the US. |
permission | Approval to do something. They had entered the country without permission. |
ratification | Making something valid by formally ratifying or confirming it. Ratification of the treaty raised problems in several member states. |
ratify | Sign or give formal consent to (a treaty, contract, or agreement), making it officially valid. Both countries were due to ratify the treaty by the end of the year. |
renege | The mistake of not following suit when able to do so. There s one of them anyhow that didn t renege him. |
sanction | Give sanction to. Foreigners in France illegally should be sent home their employers sanctioned and border controls tightened up. |
stipulate | Demand or specify (a requirement), typically as part of an agreement. He stipulated certain conditions before their marriage. |
terms | The amount of money needed to purchase something. On good terms with her in laws. |
treaty | A written agreement between two states or sovereigns. The two Presidents signed a ten year treaty of solidarity. |
unanimity | Everyone being of one mind. There is almost complete unanimity on this issue. |
unanimously | Without opposition; with the agreement of all people involved. A committee of MPs has unanimously agreed to back his bill. |