Trouvez des professeurs en Anglais
Dmitry
Agree and accord
What the difference between "agree" and "accord"?
10 avr. 2017 20:15
Réponses · 2
2
Agree is a verb that is often used in English. It means to have the same views, emotions, etc.; to harmonize in opinion or feeling (often followed by with): "I agree with you."
Accord is much more rare in English usage. We almost always use it as a noun to refer to an agreement. "Both countries have an agreement."
Accord is used in this idiomatic espression: "of one's own accord": meaning, without being asked or told; voluntarily: "We did the extra work of our own accord."
10 avril 2017
1
I can’t explain to you what the difference is, but I can explain what the similarity is.
I have never myself used “accord” as a verb, but the way I understand it “agree with” and “accord with” can both mean “be consistent with”. So “a theory that accords with the known facts”=”a theory that agrees with the known facts”.
10 avril 2017
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Dmitry
Compétences linguistiques
Anglais, Russe
Langue étudiée
Anglais
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