B. Elucidate.
No...decline=1. to withhold or deny consent to do, enter into or upon, etc.;refuse: He declined to say more about it.2.to express inability or reluctance to accept; refuse withcourtesy: to decline an invitation; to decline an offer.3.to cause to slope or incline downward.4.Grammar .a.to inflect (a noun, pronoun, or adjective), as Latinpuella, declined puella, puellae, puellae, puellam, puella inthe five cases of the singular.b.to recite or display all or some subset of the inflectedforms of a noun, pronoun, or adjective in a fixed order.deny=1. to state that (something declared or believed to be true) isnot true: to deny an accusation.2.to refuse to agree or accede to: to deny a petition.3.to withhold the possession, use, or enjoyment of: to denyaccess to secret information.4.to withhold something from, or refuse to grant a request of:to deny a beggar.5.to refuse to recognize or acknowledge; disown; disavow;repudiate: to deny one's gods.
Answer in the
corporeal
It means to assent or agree to a demand, request or treaty.I will accede to your demands.They will accede once they see that our request is reasonable.
I decided to accede to your request for a sentence.
I accede to your greater wisdom.
"Henry will accede to the throne as soon as his father croaks".
Management was not willing to accede to labor's initial demands.
The verb accede has participle adjectives acceded(agreed) and acceding (agreeing, accepting). There is no derivative adjective of the noun form accedence.
Accede
Two
grant,accede
received, come into, accede to
The opposite of "accede" is "refuse" or "decline." While "accede" means to agree or give consent, especially in a formal context, "refuse" indicates a rejection of an offer or proposal. Other antonyms could include "deny" or "disagree," highlighting a lack of agreement or acceptance.