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accepter

American  
[ak-sep-ter] / ækˈsɛp tər /

noun

  1. a person or thing that accepts.


Etymology

Origin of accepter

First recorded in 1575–85; accept + -er 1

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

In fact, I’m such a climate-science accepter that I don’t even bother having hope for the ice caps.

From The Guardian • Nov. 4, 2017

Meanwhile II Duce had not expelled, nor was he likely to expel the most experienced handout accepter in all Rome, New York Times Correspondent Arnaldo Cortesi.

From Time Magazine Archive

And it was plain to me that this girl was no beggar, no passive accepter of bounties unearned from anybody.

From The Little Red Foot by Chambers, Robert W. (Robert William)

The first is that Sun Yat-sen, born a Chinese of the nineteenth century, had the intellectual orientation of a member of the world-society, and an accepter of the Confucian ideology.

From The Political Doctrines of Sun Yat-sen: An Exposition of the San Min Chu I by Linebarger, Paul Myron Anthony

God is so far from being an accepter of persons according to their qualifications and conditions, that he finds nothing in any creature to cast the balance of his choice.

From The Works of the Rev. Hugh Binning by Binning, Hugh