acceder

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Archived revision by KevinUp (talk | contribs) as of 04:30, 4 October 2019.
Jump to navigation Jump to search
See also: accéder

English

Etymology

accede +‎ -er

Noun

acceder (plural acceders)

  1. One who accedes.
    • 1780, John Brown, The Absurdity and Perfidy of All Authoritative Toleration of Gross Heresy, Glasgow, Letter 2, p. 128,[1]
      [] lawful covenants, made by the greater part of a society bind the whole, and every future acceder to it,—at least, unless the minority o[f] acceders have, by a proper dissent, diverted the obligation from themselves []
    • 1835, Leigh Hunt, Captain Sword and Captain Pen, London: Charles Knight, Advertisement, p. 8,[2]
      He mentions this, not, of course, for readers in general, but for the sake of those daily acceders to the list of the reading public, whose knowledge of books is not yet equal to their love of them.

Further reading


Spanish

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin accēdere, present active infinitive of accēdō.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): (Spain) /aɡθeˈdeɾ/ [aɣ̞.θeˈð̞eɾ]
  • IPA(key): (Latin America) /aɡseˈdeɾ/ [aɣ̞.seˈð̞eɾ]

Verb

Lua error in Module:es-headword at line 49: Parameter 2 is not used by this template.

  1. to accede, to agree, to concur
  2. to access

Conjugation

Template:es-conj-er

Further reading