2. Verb. (third-person singular of accord) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Accords
1. accord [v] - See also: accord
Lexicographical Neighbors of Accords
Literary usage of Accords
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Book of Proverbs by Crawford Howell Toy (1899)
"The rendering charcoal accords with the term wood (that is, in each member fuel
is mentioned), but is not certain; in the other passages in which the term ..."
2. The Mirrour of Justices: Written Originally in the Old French, Long Before by Andrew Horne, Anthony Fitzherbert (1903)
"... nor will assent that his honour shall be overthrown in power nor fame. SECT.
39. Of final accords. No law forbiddeth pleas, nor accords, ..."
3. Art in Theory: An Introduction to the Study of Comparative Aesthetics by George Lansing Raymond (1894)
"How the Definition of Beauty in the Last Chapter accords with the Theory ...
A DEFINITION is of value in the degree in which it y*^ accords with the ..."
4. Painting, Sculpture and Architecture as Representative Arts; an Essay in by George Lansing Raymond (1895)
"Regularity as Applied to Sizes and Shapes—Frame work of Lines on which Art-1'roducts
are Constructed—How this accords with the Requirements of Nature in ..."
5. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1904)
"The second diagram represents the air- bubbles as gradually narrowing upwards.
This accords with the theorem of Schwendener and Steinbrink, who held that ..."
6. The Law of Contracts by Samuel Williston, Clarence Martin Lewis (1920)
"accords and similar agreements. If an agreement for the discharge of a sealed
obligation < templates not an immediate mutual surrender of rights the ..."
7. Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians by George Grove (1907)
"In this respect, and also because he was pre-eminently a vocal rather than a
symphonic composer, his musical temperament accords with that of ..."