No. Acceptance is a noun. The adjective for the verb (to accept) is accepted, the past participle, or more rarely the present participle, accepting. A related adjective is acceptable (receiving or deserving acceptance).
The adjective forms of the verb to accept are accepting, accepted, and acceptable.The noun forms for the verb to accept are acceptance and the verbal noun (gerund) accepting.
-Acceptance must be made in response to to and in exchange for the proposal -Acceptance must exactly match the term of the proposal
Offered, proffered,Definition of proffered:noun: a proposal offered for acceptance or rejectionverb: present for acceptance or rejection
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
No. Acceptance is a noun. The adjective for the verb (to accept) is accepted, the past participle, or more rarely the present participle, accepting. A related adjective is acceptable (receiving or deserving acceptance).
The noun forms of the adjective 'acceptable' are acceptability and acceptableness.
The adjective forms of the verb to accept are accepting, accepted, and acceptable.The noun forms for the verb to accept are acceptance and the verbal noun (gerund) accepting.
Some abstract nouns related to the adjective tolerable are:tolerancetolerationintolerancetolerability
Yes, "resigned" can be a verb, as in "He resigned from his job." It can also be an adjective meaning feeling acceptance or submission.
Acceptance is...
acceptance becomes valid when the letter of acceptance was placed in the post
The acceptance must be unconditional and must follow the rules regarding the method of acceptance.
rules of acceptance
Congratulations on your acceptance into university.
There is no patron saint of acceptance.
-Acceptance must be made in response to to and in exchange for the proposal -Acceptance must exactly match the term of the proposal