Word Meanings - DISACCORD - Book Publishers vocabulary database
To refuse to assent. Spenser.
Related words: (words related to DISACCORD)
- ASSENTATORY
Flattering; obsequious. -- As*sent"a*to*ri*ly, adv. - ASSENTER
One who assents. - ASSENTMENT
Assent; agreement. - ASSENTATOR
An obsequious; a flatterer. - ASSENTING
Giving or implying assent. -- As*sent"ing*ly, adv. - ASSENTIVE
Giving assent; of the nature of assent; complying. -- As*sent"ive*ness, n. - REFUSE
To throw back, or cause to keep back (as the center, a wing, or a flank), out of the regular aligment when troops aras, to refuse the right wing while the left wing attacks. 3. To decline to accept; to reject; to deny the request or petition of; - ASSENTATION
Insincere, flattering, or obsequious assent; hypocritical or pretended concurrence. Abject flattery and indiscriminate assentation degrade as much as indiscriminate contradiction and noisy debate disgust. Ld. Chesterfield. - ASSENTIENT
Assenting. - ASSENT
To admit a thing as true; to express one's agreement, acquiescence, concurrence, or concession. Who informed the governor . . . And the Jews also assented, saying that these things were so. Acts xxiv. 9. The princess assented to all that - SPENSERIAN
Of or pertaining to the English poet Spenser; -- specifically applied to the stanza used in his poem "The Faƫrie Queene." - REFUSER
One who refuses or rejects. - DISPENSER
One who, or that which, dispenses; a distributer; as, a dispenser of favors. - DISASSENT
To dissent. - DISASSENTER
One who disassents; a dissenter. State Trials . - UNASSENTED
Not assented; -- said specif. of stocks or bonds the holders of which refuse to deposit them by way of assent to an agreement altering their status, as in a readjustment.