adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a possible/acceptable/satisfactory alternative
▪ I’m busy tomorrow but Wednesday is a possible alternative.
acceptable
▪ All too often their behaviour has fallen below acceptable standards.
acceptable/unacceptable
▪ This sort of behavior is completely unacceptable.
an acceptable/reasonable/satisfactory compromise
▪ By 1982 an acceptable compromise had been reached.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
as
▪ A margin of error of 10% is seen as acceptable.
▪ Thus, what was viewed as acceptable was determined largely by the centres' main client group - elderly disabled people.
▪ Does the Minister regard that as acceptable?
▪ Arguably, however, the midwife's record of a normal fetal heart rate should be just as acceptable as evidence.
▪ And that is as acceptable an approach as a little touch of Harry at the conference.
▪ The twelve hour course was not generally as acceptable.
environmentally
▪ The alternative route was chosen on three criteria: that it should be environmentally acceptable, operationally effective and financially viable.
▪ Overall processing costs are highly competitive with other existing, environmentally acceptable technologies.
▪ Charcoal consumption from these sources is not environmentally acceptable.
generally
▪ As a consequence, the goldsmiths' receipts began to circulate as generally acceptable means of payment.
▪ From the federal perspective, generally acceptable activities were being planned and carried out, largely on local initiative.
▪ But on this and all other questions there were enormous gaps in the knowledge necessary for coming to generally acceptable decisions.
▪ The ride is firm but generally acceptable.
▪ The bases and policies used by the audit should be generally acceptable both to the accountancy profession and to the business community.
less
▪ To have left the tube and drain in place for 14-21 days would have been ideal but less acceptable to the patient.
▪ The idea of a union, of solidarity, is becoming less and less acceptable.
▪ For girls, this was less acceptable.
▪ Even in labor it is becoming less acceptable.
▪ Smoking in the workplace is becoming less and less acceptable.
▪ As we shall see in Chapter 2, this claim has now become less plausible and less acceptable.
▪ When prices do change, however, the income statement becomes less acceptable as a measure of performance.
▪ This will be much less acceptable.
more
▪ Medical advances in recent years have made male and female sterilisation simpler and more acceptable to many people.
▪ Teams hold employees to high standards, acting as a more acceptable quality control mechanism than evaluations and orders from the top.
▪ Many patients find it more acceptable if gloves are worn for all venepuncture.
▪ When a rare disagreement arose, he tried to coax stragglers along or simply found a more acceptable phrasing.
▪ Once again the change can have nothing to do with making the chapter more acceptable.
▪ In 20 years or so, Frelich believes, restoration ecology will become far more acceptable among professional foresters.
▪ Then the authority has to decide for one of the two or more acceptable options.
▪ In contrast, when tape-slide presentations were used for individual instruction, students found them more acceptable.
most
▪ To my father it sounded very much like hard work, and that was most acceptable.
▪ Reconstituted milk is most acceptable when served well chilled.
▪ This would be the least expensive and most acceptable form of longterm prophylaxis against gall stone recurrence.
▪ The introduction of change may be most acceptable and often unnoticeable through new media such as video screens.
▪ A pair of these, with a simple matching scarf in a lovely colour, makes a quick but most acceptable present.
mutually
▪ The agreement of a mutually acceptable reserve price is key.
▪ These few basic rules can make your group maximally helpful:-Meet regularly at a mutually acceptable time and place.
▪ The havens said instead that they wanted multilateral negotiations to achieve a mutually acceptable and beneficial set of standards.
▪ This commission would be composed of mutually acceptable and appropriate international personalities and representatives from governments and international organizations.
perfectly
▪ Styles of dress which are perfectly acceptable at home may be offensive to local inhabitants or may be banned altogether.
▪ But if there is no punishment, it is perfectly acceptable to tell lies.
▪ However, although words considered in a local context may seem perfectly acceptable in the sentential context these combinations may be unlikely.
▪ This was perfectly acceptable to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania; it was not at all acceptable to the court.
▪ A fair amount is conducted by ministerial correspondence, a perfectly acceptable method in constitutional terms.
▪ Frozen duck is perfectly acceptable, but-as with most products-fresh is preferred.
▪ If the seller has left himself negotiating room, then this may be perfectly acceptable.
▪ Celibacy is perfectly acceptable, although rare.
politically
▪ In some areas rate levels were already beyond the limits which were regarded as socially and politically acceptable.
▪ She always chose safe, politically acceptable topics for her films, she says.
▪ Technically sweet and politically acceptable, it avoids accusation of moral hypocrisy by using economic arguments to appeal to self interest.
▪ By contrast, solar cells are politically acceptable.
▪ The limitations of performance evaluation lead to a concern with visible and politically acceptable results.
quite
▪ This was found unacceptable by 57 percent, quite acceptable by 35 percent and very acceptable by 7 percent.
▪ In particular, habitats which appear inhospitable at one period may be quite acceptable and considered normal at another.
▪ But usually you want the goods, so an exchange of goods is normally considered quite acceptable.
▪ A double-breasted jacket needs no waistcoat, but one is quite acceptable with single-breasted.
▪ So their green suede jackets with leather collars were quite acceptable.
▪ After all, it wasn't that long ago that it was quite acceptable to belch smoke over the countryside.
▪ Before the days of audiences counted in millions, it was quite acceptable for artists to imitate other artists.
▪ Your young daughter's bossy attitude in later life may be channelled into quite acceptable leadership qualities.
socially
▪ Advertising also creates the impression that smoking is a socially acceptable norm.
▪ No, there are plenty of healthier and more socially acceptable options.
▪ The Drugs unit aims to expand pupils' knowledge of drugs so that they appreciate that only some drugs are socially acceptable.
▪ The socially acceptable reason is usually based on religious or moral beliefs.
▪ They come from the upper classes and are socially acceptable.
▪ I knew what is socially acceptable and what is not.
▪ Both factions needed a socially acceptable spokesman.
▪ He would, he realized, for the first time in his life have a socially acceptable problem.
very
▪ This was found unacceptable by 57 percent, quite acceptable by 35 percent and very acceptable by 7 percent.
▪ Both were ambassadors to Rome for their own cities - that is, they were very acceptable to the governing class of Rome.
▪ He had a good later reputation, and according to Osbern was very acceptable to Cnut because he had given him holy chrism.
▪ It took me about ten days to work my way into it, after that I found it very acceptable.
■ NOUN
alternative
▪ A semicolon following a prompt string is an acceptable alternative to a comma.
▪ This would serve as an acceptable alternative.
▪ Balked of Alfred, she would find Harry Washington a more than acceptable alternative.
▪ Employers have always been able to contract out their workers from the scheme if they offered an acceptable alternative.
▪ Although purpose-made units are expensive to buy, ordinary hand-microphones attached to simple booms make an acceptable alternative for amateur use.
▪ Nevertheless, neither the Chronicle nor the Historia Brittonum provides an acceptable alternative to the Bedan chronology.
▪ In some societies, there are no options, no acceptable alternatives to early marriage.
behaviour
▪ To summarize, norms define appropriate and acceptable behaviour in specific situations.
▪ This minefield is compounded by the moral nature of the problem; about what is and is not acceptable behaviour.
▪ Commonly, both are used consistently to help replace an undesirable behaviour with acceptable behaviour.
▪ Criminal libel is unlikely to occur other than rarely, but is available to define the limits of acceptable behaviour.
▪ This sharing of expectations about acceptable behaviour ensures conformity.
▪ All the evidence suggests that schools are generally well-ordered places where acceptable behaviour is the norm.
compromise
▪ So averaging two adjacent lines, then using the averaged line twice, is an acceptable compromise.
▪ A federation can be an acceptable compromise when strong peripheral governments create a central government.
▪ An often acceptable compromise is local manufacture or assembly by a multinational company.
▪ The model will be used to explore these energy strategies which might form the basis of acceptable compromises.
face
▪ Graduated separatism, the acceptable face of separatism, can be seen as the ripples which pass outwards from this.
▪ NILTs have always been regarded as representing the acceptable face of tribunals.
▪ But anger has its perfectly acceptable face.
form
▪ He is able, also, to work on his notes towards a more publicly acceptable form of language.
▪ Maybe it allowed him to express aggression in an acceptable form.
▪ All would be aware of the difficulty of finding ideologically acceptable forms of fun.
▪ Similarly, conspicuous consumption or display is now regarded as an acceptable form of behaviour.
▪ This would be the least expensive and most acceptable form of longterm prophylaxis against gall stone recurrence.
level
▪ The teacher will use a wide range of approaches and materials to bring them all up to an acceptable level of performance.
▪ Fortunately, it is possible to achieve acceptable levels of SO2 by four Simple and relatively inexpensive measures.
▪ A large quantity of information is needed in order to reduce this uncertainty to an acceptable level.
▪ In such cases, the environment provides foot soldiers with confusing signals regarding the acceptable level and forms of political activism.
▪ How do we reach an acceptable level of data security?
▪ But if there is a significant improvement then the programme can be continued until the problem reaches an acceptable level.
▪ This brings noise from the busiest roads to an acceptable level.
▪ Britain prefers absolute standards, which would exclude all products that failed to come up to the minimum acceptable level.
quality
▪ Peter Wood's brief is to guide us to an acceptable quality management system that genuinely reflects our practices.
▪ Teams hold employees to high standards, acting as a more acceptable quality control mechanism than evaluations and orders from the top.
▪ To obtain acceptable quality when scanning photographs, at least 64 grey scales are required.
▪ Internet video broadcasts still are crude but have the potential to one day reach acceptable quality.
solution
▪ Without it individuals would have had a choice as to which of the acceptable solutions to adopt.
▪ Efficient recycling is the only acceptable solution for Earth and the only key to sustainable life elsewhere in space.
▪ Fairly obviously, this is not one of those situations where this is an acceptable solution.
▪ The lack of consensus explains why area politicians have failed to reach an acceptable solution.
▪ Neither creative nor conventional paths will necessarily lead to an acceptable solution in every case.
▪ He agreed to go to Rome himself to try to obtain an acceptable solution.
standard
▪ This study has shown that an acceptable standard of diabetic care can be provided in normal surgery time.
▪ Students who achieve an acceptable standard may have the opportunity to progress to degree studies.
▪ Inadequate professional services are services which fall below an acceptable standard, but are short of negligent work.
▪ Sections which fall below an acceptable standard in terms of quantity, quality of content, or physical condition should receive priority.
▪ The western section is already at an acceptable standard but the east section is in poor condition, virtually unusable when wet.
▪ They will also be expected to submit answer books that are of acceptable standard.
way
▪ How, then, can the informal interview be used in sociology in an acceptable way?
▪ Having no acceptable way of expressing their feelings directly, they probably vented them on nature.
▪ Individuals may see alcohol as an acceptable way out of their problems.
▪ But they also show that there is wide disagreement about what is considered to be an acceptable way forward.
▪ Norms defining acceptable ways for settling an argument or dispute usually exclude physical violence and manslaughter.
▪ One of the more intractable problems was how to dispose of the effluent in an ecologically acceptable way.
▪ Still, wasn't that also unimportant, although in a less acceptable way?
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
mutually acceptable/beneficial/convenient etc
▪ Cleaning symbiosis on the other hand is a true form of mutually beneficial arrangement with both cleaner and host benefiting.
▪ Community Linking is direct people to people contact which leads to equal, mutually beneficial relationships across cultures.
▪ It encourages open communication, and learning about processes of living in mutually beneficial ways.
▪ Obtaining frankness within families about the feelings and expectations they have of each other can be mutually beneficial.
▪ Some of those diets were the result of a mutually beneficial alliance between physicians and food producers.
▪ These few basic rules can make your group maximally helpful:-Meet regularly at a mutually acceptable time and place.
▪ This commission would be composed of mutually acceptable and appropriate international personalities and representatives from governments and international organizations.
▪ This takes place at a time prearranged to be mutually convenient.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ It's a cheap and acceptable substitute for rubber.
▪ Smoking is no longer considered socially acceptable by many people.
▪ Some low-fat cheeses have quite an acceptable flavour but some taste like rubber.
▪ The dispute was settled in a way that was acceptable to both sides.
▪ We had a lot of applicants for the job but only a few of them were acceptable.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A Levy-Jennings quality control chart is a graphic representation of the acceptable limits of variation in the results of an analytic method.
▪ Even this is not always an acceptable defence, I should add.
▪ He also expressed optimism that an acceptable constitutional arrangement could be agreed which would obviate the need for Quebec to seek independence.
▪ Internet Explorer, the company says, is an acceptable, integrated part of the Windows system.
▪ There may be sincerely held differences concerning the level of acceptable risk.
▪ This kind of banter, needless to say, is not acceptable flirting behavior.
▪ To obtain acceptable quality when scanning photographs, at least 64 grey scales are required.