Acceptance refers to the action or process of receiving someone or something with favorable reception, or the agreement to recognize the validity or legitimacy of something. It can denote both the act of accepting proposals, ideas, or conditions, and the sense of social or emotional approval within a group or society. In psychology and philosophy, it often implies acknowledging reality without resistance.
US & AU accents are Premium
Unlock all accent variations
- You may slip into /əkˈsep.ən(t)s/ by muting the /t/; practice a strong /t/ to separate /sep/ from the final /təns/. - Substituting /s/ for /t/ in rapid speech creates /əkˈsep.səns/; insert a clear /t/ before the final -əns. - The initial unstressed syllable can be reduced too much, yielding /əkˈsep.təns/ with a barely audible first syllable; keep the schwa distinct. - Avoid conflating with similar words like acceptance vs. pretense; recognize the syllable count: ac-cep-tance (4 phonological chunks: /ə/ /k/ /ˈsep/ /təns/). - Ensure you do not glide the /t/ into the following vowel; keep a crisp release before /ə/.
- US: pronounce /əkˈSEP.təns/, with a slightly rhotic-inflected initial vowel; keep the /r/ out of it (no r-colored schwa here). - UK: crisper /t/ release and clear /ˈsep/ sequence; the final /əns/ can be slightly lighter; non-rhotic influence makes final /r/ absent. - AU: similar to UK but with a tendency for more clipped vowels; maintain /ˈsep/ as a strong nucleus and keep final /n(t)s/ cluster distinct. - Common vowel shifts: ensure the /e/ in /sep/ is closed-mid, not lax; avoid reducing it to /eɪ/ or /ɪ/. - IPA reference: US /əˈksep.təns/, UK /əˈksep.təns/, AU /əˈksep.təns/.
"Her acceptance of the award surprised no one who knew her perseverance."
"The committee’s acceptance of the proposal came after rigorous review and discussion."
"Cultural acceptance requires openness to different traditions and perspectives."
"Therapy emphasizes self-acceptance as a path to emotional well-being."
Acceptance derives from Middle French acceptence, from Latin acceptus, the past participle of accipere meaning 'to take toward oneself' (ad- 'toward' + capere 'to take'). In English, the noun form emerged in the late 15th century with senses related to receiving something offered or alliance/consent. The word evolved through legal and ceremonial language (acceptance of terms, contracts) and broadened to social and psychological contexts in the 19th and 20th centuries, where it carried connotations of affirmation, approval, and internal acknowledgment. The core sense remains the act of taking or admitting something as valid, while figurative uses (self-acceptance, cultural acceptance) developed as social and personal domains expanded. First known use appears in early modern English texts reflecting formal assent and agreement, gradually widening in scope as English vocabulary absorbed Latin and French legal terms. Today, acceptance spans formal processes (contracts, admissions) to everyday emotional states (self-acceptance).
💡 Etymology tip: Understanding word origins can help you remember pronunciation patterns and recognize related words in the same language family.
Help others use "acceptance" correctly by contributing grammar tips, common mistakes, and context guidance.
💡 These words have similar meanings to "acceptance" and can often be used interchangeably.
🔄 These words have opposite meanings to "acceptance" and show contrast in usage.
📚 Vocabulary tip: Learning synonyms and antonyms helps you understand nuanced differences in meaning and improves your word choice in speaking and writing.
Words that rhyme with "acceptance"
-ent sounds
Practice with these rhyming pairs to improve your pronunciation consistency:
🎵 Rhyme tip: Practicing with rhyming words helps you master similar sound patterns and improves your overall pronunciation accuracy.
Pronounce as /əkˈsep.təns/ (US/UK) with primary stress on the second syllable. Start with a weak schwa /ə/ leading into /k/ and /ˈsep/; the /t/ is clearly enunciated before the final /əns/. In careful speech, you’ll hear: uhk-SEP-tuhns. For audio, listen to dictionaries or pronunciation apps to compareUS/UK variants.
Common errors include merging /t/ and /s/ into /t s/ leading to /əkˈsep.səns/ instead of /əkˈsep.təns/, and misplacing the primary stress as /əkˈse.p təns/. Another frequent slip is a weak or silent /t/ in casual speech, yielding /əkˈsepəns/. To correct: pronounce the /t/ as a distinct stop before the final /əns/, and ensure the stress sits on the second syllable: /əkˈsep.təns/.
In US vs UK vs AU, the word remains /əkˈsep.təns/ in all, but rhotics influence the preceding vowels slightly; UK often shows crisper /t/ and reduced post-stress vowels; US may have a slightly more rhotic quality on the initial “a” and a quicker, smoother transition between syllables; AU follows similar patterns with a slight vowel quality shift, still maintaining /ˈsep/ as the stressed nucleus.
The difficulty comes from the two consecutive consonants around the stressed nucleus: the /k/ immediately before the /ˈsep/ and the /t/ before the /əns/, which can blend in rapid speech. Also, maintaining two-syllable flow with the non-stressed first syllable /ə/ and the final /ns/ cluster challenges non-native speakers. Focus on segment boundaries and timing the syllable rhythm: ək-SEP-təns.
A unique point is the syllable boundary between /sep/ and /t/. In careful speech you keep /t/ as a clean stop before /əns/. A common search-query nuance is people asking about “accept-ance” linkage: ensure you pronounce the middle transition crisply: /ə kˈsep tən s/ with accurate alveolar /t/ and soft /ə/.
🗣️ Voice search tip: These questions are optimized for voice search. Try asking your voice assistant any of these questions about "acceptance"!
- Shadowing: listen to 6–8 native samples and imitate at 90–95% speed, focusing on the middle /ˈsep/ and final /təns/. - Minimal pairs: acceptance vs. concept/attempt/advancement to feel boundary and rhythm; practice 5–7 pairs. - Rhythm practice: stress-timed rhythm; practice hard-tied syllables: /ə ˈksep təns/ with even timing. - Intonation: practice neutral declarative with slight falling intonation; use
No related words found