to reconcile oneself to
1reconcile oneself to — index submit (yield) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
2reconcile oneself to one's fate — be at peace with one s destiny, accept one s fate …
3reconcile — [v1] make peace; adjust accommodate, accord, accustom, appease, arbitrate, arrange, assuage, attune, bring together, bring to terms, bury the hatchet*, come together, compose, conciliate, conform, cool*, coordinate, fit, fix up, get together on,… …
4reconcile — verb 1) the news reconciled us Syn: reunite, bring (back) together (again), restore friendly relations between, make peace between; pacify, appease, placate, mollify; formal conciliate Ant: estrange, alienate 2) her divorced parents hav …
5reconcile — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. t. conciliate, propitiate, placate, appease; harmonize, accord; settle. See pacification, agreement, compromise. II (Roget s IV) v. 1. [To adjust] Syn. adapt, arrange, regulate, square; see adjust 1 …
6reconcile — v 1. conciliate, resign, let pass, submit to, yield to; accommodate oneself to, accept, condone, overlook; make the best of, not make an issue of, make the most of, rise above; take things as they come, Inf. roll with the punches, grin and bear… …
7resign oneself to — Syn: reconcile oneself to, come to terms with …
8come to terms with — reconcile oneself to. → term …
9rec´on|cil´er — rec|on|cile «REHK uhn syl», transitive verb, ciled, cil|ing. 1. a) to make friends again: »The children had quarreled but were soon reconciled. Being all now good friends, for common danger…had effectually reconciled them (Daniel Defoe). b) to… …
10rec|on|cile — «REHK uhn syl», transitive verb, ciled, cil|ing. 1. a) to make friends again: »The children had quarreled but were soon reconciled. Being all now good friends, for common danger…had effectually reconciled them (Daniel Defoe). b) to win over: »to… …