ac·com·mo·date
ə-ˈkä-mə-ˌdāt
accommodated; accommodating
1
: to provide with something desired, needed, or suited
I needed money, and they accommodated me with a loan.
2
a
: to make room for
rebuilt the ship to accommodate the bigger containers
b
: to hold without crowding or inconvenience
a hotel that can accommodate about 100 people
3
4
: to give consideration to : to allow for
trying to accommodate the special interests of various groups
5
: to make fit, suitable, or congruous
: to adapt oneself
The natural world accommodates and adjusts.—
Peter Dunne
also
: to undergo visual accommodation
… lenses or implants that help the eye accommodate … —
Herb E. Greenman
ac·com·mo·da·tor
ə-ˈkä-mə-ˌdā-tər
plural -s
1
: one who substitutes for a regularly employed domestic worker
2
: someone who gives consideration to or makes allowances for differing conditions, opinions, or circumstances
The reason for this neglect was not hard to hear, for Parker was an accommodator, refusing to take sides in the big artistic controversies of his time, making room for dignified Brahms and the chromaticisms of Wagner.—
Richard S. Ginell, Los Angeles Times, 19 May 2008
3
: someone who provides accommodations
More than 15 accommodators … are offering Florida Residents deep discounts and deals this summer.—
Brandenton (Florida) Herald, 9 May 2010
4
: an individual or company that temporarily holds the proceeds of a sale (such as a real estate sale) so that the seller may defer capital gains taxes that would otherwise result from the sale
The accommodators make money on fees and interest earned off the proceeds.—
Lewiston (Idaho) Morning Tribune, 1 Jan. 2009
Love words? Need even more definitions?
Merriam-Webster unabridged



