Word
Of
The
Day
acquiesce
acquiesce \ak-wee-ESS\
verb
To acquiesce to something is to accept it, agree with it, or allow it to happen by staying silent or by not arguing.
Acquiesce is somewhat formal, and is often used with
in or
to.
// Eventually, the professor
acquiesced to the students’ request to have the seminar’s final class be a potluck lunch.
See the entry >
Examples:
“It may be just the right time for a chicken burger to become a significant stop on the American burger’s continual evolution—but whether beef-clinging purists will
acquiesce to a poultry spin, or cry fowl, remains to be seen.” — Talib Visram,
Slate, 6 Apr. 2026
Did you know?
If you’re looking to give your speech a gentle, formal flair, don’t give
acquiesce the silent treatment. Essentially meaning “to comply quietly,”
acquiesce has as its ultimate source the Latin verb
quiēscere, “to be quiet.” (
Quiet itself is also a close relation.)
Quiēscere can also mean “to repose,” “to fall asleep,” or “to rest,” and when
acquiesce arrived in English via French in the early 1600s, it did so with two senses: the familiar “to agree or comply” and the now-obsolete “to rest satisfied.” Herman Melville employed the former in
Moby-Dick, when Ahab orders the “confounded” crew to change the Pequod’s course after a storm damages the compasses: “Meanwhile, whatever were his own secret thoughts, Starbuck said nothing, but quietly he issued all requisite orders; while Stubb and Flask—who in some small degree seemed then to be sharing his feelings—likewise unmurmuringly acquiesced.”