Key: "S:" = Show Synset (semantic) relations, "W:" = Show Word (lexical) relations
Display options for sense: (gloss) "an example sentence"
Verb
S: (v) suit, accommodate, fit (be agreeable or acceptable to) "This suits my needs"
S: (v) adapt, accommodate (make fit for, or change to suit a new purpose) "Adapt our native cuisine to the available food resources of the new country"
S: (v) gear, pitch (set the level or character of) "She pitched her speech to the teenagers in the audience"
S: (v) popularize, popularise (make understandable to the general public) "Carl Sagan popularized cosmology in his books"
S: (v) fit (insert or adjust several objects or people) "Can you fit the toy into the box?"; "This man can't fit himself into our work environment"
S: (v) anglicise, anglicize (make English in appearance) "She anglicised her name after moving from Paris to London"
S: (v) shoehorn (fit for a specific purpose even when not well suited)
S: (v) tailor, orient (adjust to a specific need or market) "a magazine oriented towards young people"; "tailor your needs to your surroundings"
S: (v) domesticate, tame (make fit for cultivation, domestic life, and service to humans) "The horse was domesticated a long time ago"; "The wolf was tamed and evolved into the house dog"
W: (adj) adaptative [Related to: adapt] (having a capacity for adaptation) "the adaptive coloring of a chameleon"
W: (adj) adaptable [Related to: adapt] (capable of adapting (of becoming or being made suitable) to a particular situation or use) "to succeed one must be adaptable"; "the frame was adaptable to cloth bolts of different widths"
W: (n) adaptor [Related to: adapt] (device that enables something to be used in a way different from that for which it was intended or makes different pieces of apparatus compatible)
W: (n) adapter [Related to: adapt] (device that enables something to be used in a way different from that for which it was intended or makes different pieces of apparatus compatible)
W: (n) accommodation [Related to: accommodate] (in the theories of Jean Piaget: the modification of internal representations in order to accommodate a changing knowledge of reality)
S: (v) accommodate (provide with something desired or needed) "Can you accommodate me with a rental car?"
S: (v) accommodate, hold, admit (have room for; hold without crowding) "This hotel can accommodate 250 guests"; "The theater admits 300 people"; "The auditorium can't hold more than 500 people"
S: (v) lodge, accommodate (provide housing for) "We are lodging three foreign students this semester"
S: (v) oblige, accommodate (provide a service or favor for someone) "We had to oblige him"
S: (v) accommodate, reconcile, conciliate (make (one thing) compatible with (another)) "The scientists had to accommodate the new results with the existing theories"