A-C-C-E-P-T-I-N-G is how accepting is spelled.
You've spelled it correctly here-although some people accept alternate spellings like Kashyyk, Kashik, or Kasheek.
That is the spelling of the verb to accept, meaning to receive or to agree with.The forms include acceptance and accepting.The similar-sounding word except means excluding, or to leave out.The forms include exception and exceptional (special).The related word excerpt means a sampled part.
It is spelled "receive" in that it follows the rule "I before E except after C."Yes. The word "receive" means to accept something sent or given.
That is the correct spelling of the word "believe" (accept as true).You can remember this spelling because you should never believe a lie.
You have it correctly spelled. Accept
A-C-C-E-P-T-I-N-G is how accepting is spelled.
You've spelled it correctly here-although some people accept alternate spellings like Kashyyk, Kashik, or Kasheek.
That is the spelling of the verb to accept, meaning to receive or to agree with.The forms include acceptance and accepting.The similar-sounding word except means excluding, or to leave out.The forms include exception and exceptional (special).The related word excerpt means a sampled part.
if there is the sound of the vowels a,e,u than always the spelling starts with c and if there are the vowels accept these three or if there is the sound of y also the spelling always starts with k
It is spelled "receive" in that it follows the rule "I before E except after C."Yes. The word "receive" means to accept something sent or given.
Genius (when spelled correctly) is a subjective term and can be any IQ over the normal average of about 100. The most widely accepted answer is 130 because that is the lowest IQ that the group Mensa will supposedly accept
That is the correct spelling of the word "believe" (accept as true).You can remember this spelling because you should never believe a lie.
Accept becomes acceptable. "Acceptible" with an "i" is incorrect spelling.
The correct spelling is receive (get, accept).Follows the spelling rule "I before E except after C."
Words in the United Kingdom are not spelled wrong, but they are spelled differently from the way they are spelled in the United States.Standardized spelling is a relatively recent concept. Look at how people wrote 200 years ago and you will see everyone spelled as they thought best, and many variations can be seen, even in the same letter. Standardized spelling developed long after the US split from Great Britain and the two settled on slightly different standards. By the time communications became easy and common for most people over such distances, it was too late to settle on a common standard spelling.So the UK spells "colour" and "aluminium" and the US uses "color" and "aluminum." These are minor differences that people simply need to understand and tolerate, or even simply accept. Just as we need to accept that in the US we talk about the "trunk of a car" and in the UK they speak of the "boot of a car."
If your spelling and grammar are already correct, then changes will make them incorrect and should not be accepted.