capitulate
21capitulate — see CHAPTER …
22capitulate — ca·pit·u·late || kÉ™ pɪtjÊŠleɪt v. give in, surrender …
23capitulate — [kə pɪtjʊleɪt] verb cease to resist an opponent or an unwelcome demand; surrender. Derivatives capitulator noun Origin C16 (in the sense parley, draw up terms ): from Fr. capituler, from med. L. capitulare draw up under headings , from L.… …
24capitulate — v. n. Surrender (by treaty), yield on conditions …
25capitulate — verb (I) 1 to accept or agree to something that you have been opposing until now: Helen finally capitulated and let her son have a car. 2 formal to accept defeat by your enemies in a war; surrender 1 (1) capitulation noun (C, U) …
26capitulate — v 1. surrender, give up, lay down arms, raise the white flag, cry craven; yield, submit, succumb, fall, bite the dust; acknowledge defeat, come to terms; throw in the towel or the sponge, throw up one s hands; call it quits, Sl. pack it in, give… …
27capitulate — ca·pit·u·late …
28capitulate — verb Syn: surrender, give in, yield, concede defeat, give up (the struggle), submit, lay down one s arms, throw in the towel/sponge Ant: resist, hold out …
29capitulate — [kəˈpɪtjʊˌleɪt] verb [I] formal to stop opposing or fighting someone, and agree to what they want capitulation [kəˌpɪtjʊˈleɪʃ(ə)n] noun [U] …
30capitulate — /kəˈpɪtʃəleɪt / (say kuh pichuhlayt) verb (i) (capitulated, capitulating) to surrender unconditionally or on stipulated terms. {Medieval Latin capitulātus, past participle of capitulāre arrange in chapters, from Latin capitulum capitulum; for… …