Advertisement
Advertisement
accelerate
[ak-sel-uh-reyt]
verb (used with object)
to cause faster or greater activity, development, progress, advancement, etc., in.
to accelerate economic growth.
to hasten the occurrence of.
to accelerate the fall of a government.
Mechanics., to change the velocity of (a body) or the rate of (motion); cause to undergo acceleration.
to reduce the time required for (a course of study) by intensifying the work, eliminating detail, etc.
verb (used without object)
to move or go faster; increase in speed.
to progress or develop faster.
accelerate
/ ækˈsɛləˌreɪt /
verb
to go, occur, or cause to go or occur more quickly; speed up
(tr) to cause to happen sooner than expected
(tr) to increase the velocity of (a body, reaction, etc); cause acceleration
Other Word Forms
- accelerable adjective
- accelerative adjective
- acceleratedly adverb
- overaccelerate verb
- reaccelerate verb
- self-accelerating adjective
- unaccelerated adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of accelerate1
Word History and Origins
Origin of accelerate1
Example Sentences
The following year, in February 2024, the company announced an accelerated timeline for the factory.
It also addresses the uncertainty around whether Hamas would be able to assemble all the living hostages quickly in its battered and fragmented state and points to a possibly accelerated timetable for their release.
The research was funded through two National MS Society initiatives: a standard investigator-initiated grant and the organization's Fast Forward program, which accelerates commercialization of promising research.
It’ll endanger Americans, baselessly stoke mistrust in one of the future’s most important health technologies and accelerate the offshoring of American biotech jobs that are critical for our national security.
The PTC also spoke out against media consolidation, which accelerated in the 1990s, “the problem of having too few voices hold the microphone,” Winter said.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse