Word that means agreement

соглашение, договор, согласие, согласование, уговор

существительное

- соглашение, договор

collective agreement — коллективный договор
armistice agreement — соглашение о перемирии
procedural agreement — соглашение /договорённость/ по процедурным вопросам
as part of the agreement — в рамках соглашения

- согласие; договорённость

- грам. согласование
- спец. согласие, совпадение

agreement by order of magnitude — совпадение по порядку величины

Мои примеры

Словосочетания

a verbal agreement to finish the work — устное согласие закончить работу  
the observance of a peace agreement — соблюдение мирного соглашения  
the unexpressed terms of the agreement — негласные условия данного соглашения  
to conclude an agreement — заключить договор, соглашение  
to divulge the terms of an agreement — обнародовать условия соглашения  
gentleman’s agreement — джентльменское соглашение  
hammer out an agreement — выбить согласие  
inchoate agreement — недооформленное соглашение  
complete / full / solid agreement — полное согласие  
mutual agreement — взаимное согласие  
armistice / ceasefire agreement — соглашение о прекращении военных действий  
sales agreement — договор о продаже  

Примеры с переводом

No such agreement was made.

Такого уговора не было.

I thought we had an agreement.

Я думал, мы договорились.

They had an unwritten agreement.

У них был негласный договор.

We reached an agreement with them to cooperate fully at all times.

Мы заключили с ними договор о тесном и долговременном сотрудничестве.

Washington Agreement

Вашингтонское соглашение

The two parties were in agreement.

Обе стороны были согласны.

London Debt Agreement

Лондонское соглашение о долгах ФРГ другим западным странам

ещё 23 примера свернуть

Примеры, ожидающие перевода

We don’t have a proper agreement, but we have an informal understanding, if you like.

Для того чтобы добавить вариант перевода, кликните по иконке , напротив примера.

Возможные однокоренные слова

disagreement  — разногласие, расхождение во мнениях, ссора, разлад

Формы слова

noun
ед. ч.(singular): agreement
мн. ч.(plural): agreements

balanced-weights

Accord appears in Old English with the meaning «to reconcile» or «to bring into agreement,» which was borrowed from its Anglo-French etymon, acorder, a word related to Latin concordāre, meaning «to agree.» This original sense of accord is transitive, and in modern English it still occurs but infrequently. Its transitive sense «to grant or give as appropriate, due, or earned»—as in «The teacher’s students accord her respect»—is more often encountered.

So your hope for any new president—small tests come that are successfully met. And then they feel good inside, they get larger and then they move on to the larger crises. But crises don’t accord themselves to presidential needs.
— Doris Kearns Goodwin, quoted on NBC, 24 Dec. 2000

In according themselves with Title IX, schools are often faced with two choices: adding women’s opportunities or cutting men’s. As most schools are finding out, abiding by Title IX often means both.
— Daniel Roberts, The Montana Kaimin (University of Montana), 22 Oct. 1997

On the flip side, the verb’s intransitive sense «to be consistent or in harmony» (which is usually used with with) is frequently found, as in «The testimony did not accord with the known facts» or «His plans for the company did not accord with other investors.»

The noun accord has the meaning «agreement» or «conformity.» It often occurs in legal, business, or political contexts where it is synonymous with treaty and other similar words for formal agreement.

men-shaking-hands

In Middle English, agree was formed agreen and had the various meanings of «to please, gratify, consent, concur.» It was borrowed from Anglo-French agreer. That word is composed of  a-, a verb-forming prefix going back to Latin ad-, and -greer, a verbal derivative of gré, meaning «gratitude, satisfaction, liking, pleasure, assent.» The French base derives from Latin grātum, the neuter of grātus, meaning «thankful, received with gratitude, welcome, pleasant.» Semantically, the etymology of agree is very agreeable. 

In Anglo-French, agrément referred to an arrangement agreed to between two or more parties as well as to the action or fact of agreeing, consenting, or concurring (more on those «c» words later). Late Middle English adopted the word as agrement with the same meanings, which are widely used today. The modern spelling, agreement, was used contemporaneously with agrement

In grammar, agreement refers to the fact or state of elements in a sentence or clause being alike—that is, agreeing—in gender, number, or person. For example, in «We are late» the subject and verb agree in number and person (there’s no agreement in «We is late»); in «Students are responsible for handing in their homework» the antecedent («students») of the pronoun («their») agree. The antecedent of a pronoun is the noun or other pronoun to which the pronoun refers. A synonym of this agreement is concord.

What meane you by Concords? A. The agreements of words togither, in some speciall Accidents or qualities: as in one Number, Person, Case, or Gender.
— John Brinsley, The Posing of the Parts, 1612

thumbs-up-illustration

Assent descends from Latin assentire, a combination of the prefix ad- (meaning «to» or «toward») and sentire («to feel» or «to think»). The meanings of the Latin roots imply having a feeling or thought toward something, and that suggestion carries over to English’s assent, which denotes freely agreeing with or approving something that has been proposed or presented after thoughtful consideration. Assent is used as a noun or a verb with the meaning «to agree or approve.»

The patient gave her assent to be part of the medical study.

Many at the meeting nodded in assent. 

Both parties assented to the terms of the contract.

street-market

Bargain, as a noun and verb, began being exchanged in English during the 14th century. We know that it developed from Anglo-French bargaigner, meaning «to haggle,» but its history thereafter is unclear. The first known use is as a noun referring to a discussion between two parties on the terms of agreement. 

I do not care, I’ll give thrice so much land / To any well deserving friend; / But in the way of bargain, mark ye me, I’ll cavil on the ninth part of a hair.
— William Shakespeare, Henry IV, Part I, 1598

That sense fell into obsolescence by the end of the 17th century; however, another sense of bargain from the 14th century, referring to an agreement (concluded through discussion) that settles what each party gives or receives to or from the other, survives. It wasn’t until the 16th century that bargain began being used as a word for what is acquired through such an agreement by negotiating, haggling, dickering … by bargaining.

From those visits to unsanitary Houndsley streets in search of Diamond, he had brought back not only a bad bargain in horse-flesh, but the further misfortune of some ailment which for a day or two had deemed mere depression and headache, but which got so much worse….
— George Eliot, Middlemarch, 1871

This nominal sense is often used without a qualifying adjective (such as good or bad) to indicate something that is bought or sold at a price which is lower than the actual value—in other words, a good deal: «At that price, the house is a bargain» or «We got a bargain on tickets for our flight.»  

hands-clasped

Early recorded evidence of bond goes back to the 12th century and ties the word to things that bind, constrict, or confine (such as a fetter). The word is believed to be a phonetic variant of band, which had the same meaning. 

From the early 14th century, bond has been used for various kinds of «binding» agreements or covenants, such as «the bonds of holy matrimony.» Later, this sense was generalized to any «binding» element or force, as «the bonds of friendship.» In 16th-century law, it became the name for a deed or other legal instrument «binding» a person to pay a sum of money owed or promised.

Go with me to a notary, seal me there / Your single bond, and, in a merry sport, if you repay me not on such a day, / In such a place, such sum or sums as are / Express’d in the condition, let the forfeit / Be nominated for an equal pound / Of your fair flesh….
— William Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice, 1596-97

In U.S. law, bond specifically refers to a formal written agreement by which a person undertakes to perform a certain act (e.g., appearing in court or fulfilling the obligations of a contract). The failure to perform the act obligates the person to pay a sum of money or to forfeit money on deposit. A surety usually is involved, and the bond makes the surety responsible for the consequences of the obligated person’s behavior. Bonds are often given to people suspected of committing a crime («The accused was released on $10,000 bond»), but any person obligated to preform a duty might have to give bond.

shadowy-group-meeting

Cartel is ultimately derived from the Greek word for a leaf of papyrus, chartēs, and is thus a relative of card, chart, and charter. In Latin, the Greek word became charta and referred to either the leaf or to that which is written on papyrus (such as a letter or poem). Old Italian took the word as carta and used it to denote a leaf of paper or a card. The diminutive form cartello served to denote a placard or a poster and then acquired the sense of «a written challenge or letter of defiance.» The French borrowed cartello as cartel with the meaning «a letter of defiance,» and English then borrowed the French word in form and meaning.  

Indignant as he was at this impertinence, there was something so exquisitely absurd in such a cartel of defiance, that Nicholas was obliged to bite his lip and read the note over two or three times before he could muster sufficient gravity and sternness to address the hostile messenger, who had not taken his eyes from the ceiling, nor altered the expression of his face in the slightest degree.
— Charles Dickens, Nicholas Nickleby, 1838

During the 17th century, cartel came to refer to a written agreement between warring nations especially for the treatment and exchange of prisoners. This usage is exemplified by Bishop Gilbert Burnet in his History of His Own Time (1734): «By a cartel that had been settled between the two armies, all prisoners were to be redeemed at a set price, and within a limited time.»  

German borrowed the French word cartel as Kartell. During the 1880s, the Germans found a new use for the word to denote the economic coalition of private industries to regulate the quality and quantity of goods to be produced, the prices to be paid, the conditions of delivery to be required, and the markets to be supplied.

English took up this German usage around 1900 but applied it mainly to international coalitions of private, independent commercial or industrial enterprises designed to limit competition or fix prices. American antitrust laws ban such cartels or trusts as being in restraint of trade, but they exist internationally with perhaps the most familiar one being the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).

hands-in-circle

Since the 1500s, compact has been used in English to designate an agreement or covenant between two or more parties. It descends from Latin compactum («agreement»), a noun use of compactus, the past participle of compacisci («to make an agreement»), which joins the prefix com- («with, together») with pacisci («to agree or contract»). Pascisci is also the source of pact, an earlier synonym of compact.

The Mayflower Compact of 1620 was drafted to bind the passengers landing at Plymouth into a political body and pledge members to abide by any laws that would be established. 

Again, witchcraft, a devilish art, whereby some men and women, having made a compact with the devil, either expressly or implicitly, are enabled, with God’s permission, and by the assistance of Satan, to produce effects beyond the ordinary course and order of nature, and these for the most part rather mischievous to others, than beneficial to themselves.»
— William Burkitt, Expository Notes, with Practical Observations on the New Testament, 1789

Latin compactus is also the source of the adjective compact, which is used to describe things smaller than others, using little space, or having parts that are close together. This compactus, however, is the past participle of Latin compingere, meaning «to put together.» The verb is a compound of com- and pangere («to fasten»). The adjective is unpacked in 14th-century English, and by the 17th century, the related noun referring to things compact (modern applications are for cosmetic cases or automobiles) settles in.

notebook-binder

Composition derives from Latin composito, which itself is from compositus, the past participle of componere, meaning «to put together.» Since its entry in the 14th century, composition has gained a number of senses based on arranging or putting something together. One group of senses refers to the results of composition or, rather, composing.

Students know composition as the name for a brief essay (the putting together of words and sentences); philharmonic aficionados know it as the name for a long, complex piece of music (the arrangement of musical sounds); historians and lawyers know it as a term for a mutual settlement or agreement, such as a treaty or compromise (the coming together and reconciling of differences). 

Obviously all of us know that the composition that was reached in Korea is not satisfactory to America, but it is far better than to continue the bloody, dreary sacrifice of lives with no possible strictly military victory in sight.
— Dwight D. Eisenhower, address, 19 Aug. 1954

venn-diagram

15th-century English borrowed Anglo-French compromisse, meaning «mutual promise to abide by an arbiter’s decision,» virtually unchanged in form and definition. The familiar usage of compromise for the settlement of differences by agreeing to mutual concessions soon followed. 

Shall we, upon the footing of our land, / Send fair-play orders and make compromise, / Insinuation, parley and base truce / To arms invasive?
— William Shakespeare, King John, 1623

All government, indeed every human benefit and enjoyment, every virtue, and prudent act, is founded on compromises and barter.
— Edmund Burke, speech, 22 Mar. 1775

The French word is derived from Latin compromissum, which itself is related to the past participle of compromittere (promittere means «to promise»). In English, compromit was once used as a synonym of the verb compromise in its obsolete sense «to bind by mutual agreement» and in its modern sense «to cause the impairment of.»

Hence it is argued that the ratification of the late treaty could not have compromitted our peace.
— Henry Clay, letter, 27 July 1844

As a verb, compromise indicates the giving up of something that you want in order to come to a mutual agreement («The union and employer agreed to compromise»). Another sense is «to expose to suspicion, discredit, or mischief,» as in «The actor’s career has been compromised by his politically incorrect tweets» or «The editor-in-chief would not compromise his principles.» And as mentioned above, it can imply exposing someone or something to risk, endangerment, or serious consequences. Confidential information, national security, or one’s immune system might be said to be «compromised.»

people-talking-across-conference-table

Concord is from Latin concord-, concors, both of which denote «agreeing» and are rooted in com-, meaning «together,» and cord-, cor-, meaning «heart.» Literally, the Latin terms united translate as «hearts together,» which gives reason as to why the earliest meanings of English concord include «a state of agreement,» «harmony,» and «accord.» The word’s sense of «agreement by stipulation, compact, or covenant» beats next, and in time, concord designates a treaty establishing peace and amicable relationships between peoples or nations. Thus, two countries may sign a concord on matters that have led to hostility in the past and live in peace and concord. 

He now openly proclaimed that he had no intentions of abiding by the concord of Salamanca, and that he would never consent to an arrangement prejudicing in any degree his, and his wife’s, exclusive possession of the crown of Castile.
— William H. Prescott, The History of the Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella, 1838

If you recall, concord is also synonymous with grammatical agreement.

illustration-of-first-consul

Concordat is a French word for a formal agreement between two or more parties. It is synonymous with words like compact and covenant, but during the 17th century it was appointed as the official name for an agreement between church and state for the regulation of ecclesiastical matters. A historic concordat is one concluded in 1801 between Napoleon Bonaparte as the first consul and Pope Pius VII. It defined the status of the Roman Catholic Church in France and regulated the relations between church and state.

hands-raised

Like concur («I concur with the assessment»), concurrence implies agreement. The verb originates from Latin concurrere, meaning «to assemble in haste, collide, exist simultaneously, be in agreement,» and the noun—concurrence—derives from Latin concurrentia, «coming together, simultaneous occurrence.» Usage of concurrence concurs with its Latin ancestor’s. Additionally, concurrence has the extended meaning «agreement in action or opinion.» 

The month of December, with the concurrence of Hanukka and Christmas, has become a period devoted by many to interfaith understanding.
— Haim Shapiro, The Jerusalem Post, 10 Jan. 1987

The Electoral College is enshrined in the Constitution itself, so getting rid of it would require the concurrence of two-thirds of both houses of Congress plus three-quarters of the state legislatures.
— Hendrik Hertzberg, The New Yorker, 6 Mar. 2006

In law, the word is used as a synonym of consent, as in «The Secretary of the Treasury obtained the written concurrence of the attorney general.» Here’s a presidential example:

If the President declares in writing that he is un­able to discharge the powers and duties of his office, such powers and duties shall be discharged by the Vice-President as Acting President. … If the President does not so declare, and the Vice-President with the written concurrence of a majority of the heads of the executive departments or such other body as Congress may by law provide, transmits to the Congress his written declaration that the Pres­ident is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office, the Vice-President shall immedi­ately assume the powers and duties of the office as Acting President.
Application of the Twenty-Fifth Amendment to Vacancies in the Office of the Vice President, November 1973

hand-signing-paper

The parent of consent is Latin consentire, a mutual joining of the prefix com- (meaning «with,» «together») with sentire («to feel»). The notion of «feeling together» is implied in English’s consent, which denotes agreement with, compliance in, or approval of what is done or proposed by another. Consent is used as a noun or a verb with the meaning «to agree» or «to give permission.»

He shall have Power, by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, to make Treaties, provided two thirds of the Senators present concur.
— U.S. Constitution

He consented to the search of his Mercedes, and officers recovered about 54 ATM receipts, four credit cards and six gift cards. 
— Trish Mehaffey, The Gazette (Cedar Rapids, Iowa), 6 Nov. 2019

And, of course, children need parental consent to go on school trips.

In law, consent is specifically used for the voluntary agreement or acquiescence by a person of age who is not under duress or coercion and usually who has knowledge or understanding. By «of age» is meant «age of consent,» which is the age at which a person is deemed competent by law to give consent. Eighteen years old is the standard age of consent in the United States.

There is also «informed consent,» which is defined as «consent to surgery by a patient or to participation in a medical experiment by a subject after achieving an understanding of what is involved.»

contract-being-signed

English secured Anglo-French contract as a word for a binding agreement between two or more persons in the 14th century. Its roots extend back to Latin contrahere, meaning «to draw together» as well as «to enter into a relationship or agreement.» Early popular contracts were of the matrimonial kind.

I am sure you are not angrie, seeing things past cannot be / recald; and being witnesses to their contract, will be also welwillers / to the match.
— John Lyly, Mother Bombie, 1598

But contract can refer to any agreement between two or more parties that is legally enforceable. Typically, a contract creates in each party a duty to do something (e.g., provide goods or a service at a set price and according to a specified schedule). It may also create the duty not to do something (e.g., divulge sensitive company information). 

In the early 20th century, contract was snatched by members of the criminal underworld as a term for an order or arrangement for a hired assassin to kill a particular person.

But I should report, sir, that Scaramanga does not have a contract on me. He couldn’t have missed me tonight. Instead he hit a chap at a club.
— Roger Moore (as James Bond), in The Man with the Golden Gun, 1974

microphone-in-front-of-crowd

Convention is a familiar word for a large meeting of people, usually lasting several days, to talk about their shared work or interests—a teacher or publisher convention, for example—or for some common purpose. In politics, a traditional convention is a meeting of the delegates of a political party for the purpose of formulating a platform and selecting candidates for office (e.g., the Democratic/Republican National Convention). Other conventions are fan-based, and there are countless such conventions centered on gaming, comic books, and the anime, sci-fi, and horror genres—to name a few. This use of convention is in keeping with its ancestry. The word is from Latin convenire, meaning «to assemble, come together.» The Latin root also means «to be suitable» or «to agree,» which is recognizable in the word’s senses relating to established usage, customs, rules, techniques, or practices that are widely accepted and followed. 

Words express whatever meaning convention has attached to them, and so it may be argued that the State has covenanted against this tax in express terms.
— Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., Trimble v Seattle, 1914

The author uses the convention of the first-person narrator who observes all but is not implicated in the action.

Another familiar use of convention is in law and politics where it is applied as a term for an agreement between two or more groups (as countries or political organizations) for regulation of matters affecting all—for example, the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. There are also the Geneva Conventions, a series of four international agreements (1864, 1906, 1929, 1949) signed in Geneva, Switzerland, that established the humanitarian principles by which the signatory nations are to treat an enemy’s military and civilian nationals in wartime.

signed-agreement

The word covenant is commonly associated with the Christian and Judaic religions. In the Old Testament, it designates agreements or treaties made among peoples or nations but more notably the promises that God extended to humankind (e.g., the promise to Noah to never again destroy the Earth by flood or the promise to Abraham that his descendants would multiply and inherit the land of Israel). God’s revelation of the Law to Moses on Mount Sinai created a pact between God and Israel known as the Sinai Covenant. The Law was inscribed on two tablets and in biblical times were housed in a gold-plated wooden chest known as the Ark of the Covenant. 

In secular law, covenant is used to refer to an official agreement or compact («an international covenant on human rights»). It can also apply to a contract or a promise within a contract for the performance or nonperformance of some action («a covenant not to sue»).

The word also has verbal meaning: «to pledge or come to formal agreement.» See Holmes’ quote at convention (above) for an example.

EDITOR’S NOTE: There are other words designating various types of agreements—such as deal, pact, pledge, settlement, and treaty—but we promised only the A’s, B’s, and C’s. We fulfilled that promise.


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That agreement cannot be withdrawn or appealed.



Такое соглашение не подлежит отмене, иначе говоря, на него нельзя подавать апелляцию.


This agreement replaces any other agreement that you may have with us.



Это соглашение заменяет любое другое соглашение, которое у вас может быть с нами.


Lease agreement is more flexible than loan agreement or credit agreement.


This agreement also has other names such as: Franchising agreement and agreement of Commercial concession.



Данный договор имеет и другие названия, такие как договор франчайзинга или договор коммерческой концессии.


Someone shaking their head no means agreement.



И если кто-либо из них кивает головой, это вовсе не означает согласие.


Such an agreement can be reached much more easily than an agreement concerning some ideal form of social life.



Такое согласие может быть достигнуто гораздо легче, чем согласие по поводу идеальной формы социальной жизни.


Actual cost per vehicle lease agreement.



Фактические расходы на одно автотранспортное средство в соответствии с договором об аренде.


This written agreement can constitute part of the employment agreement or a separate agreement.



Такой договор может составлять часть трудового договора либо представлять собой отдельное соглашение.


After the expiration of the residential sub-tenancy agreement the agreement may be extended by agreement of the contracting parties.



По истечении срока договора поднайма жилого помещения договор может быть возобновлен по соглашению договаривающихся сторон.


The interim agreement shall take the place of the armistice agreement until the conclusion of a full peace agreement.



Это промежуточное соглашение должно заменить собой соглашение о перемирии вплоть до заключения окончательного соглашения о мире.


Preparation of a corporate agreement (an agreement of the member’s corporate rights, shareholder agreement).



Составление корпоративного договора (договора об осуществлении корпоративных прав участника, акционерного соглашения).


Each covenant and agreement in this agreement shall be construed for all purposes to be a separate and independent covenant or agreement.



Каждая конвенция и соглашение к настоящему Соглашению, для всех целей будет считаться независимой и отдельной конвенции или соглашения.


The written agreement between an insurance company and a customer outlining each party’s obligations in an annuity coverage agreement.



Письменное соглашение между страховой компанией и клиентом с описанием каждой стороной своих обязательств в аннуитет охвата соглашения.


If you withdraw from a remote agreement, the agreement is considered invalid.



Если вы откажетесь от дистанционного договора, договор считается недействительным.


However, this does not mean that we can simply forget about the existing agreement and must move toward concluding a new agreement.



Но это ещё не означает, что мы просто можем забыть о существующем соглашении и должны перейти к заключению нового соглашения.


In the west, there is even such a thing as a gentlemen’s agreement (or agreement).



На западе даже существует такое явление как джентльменский договор (или соглашение).


While the agreement is not a legal document, it represents a ‘political’ agreement made between the three parties.



Хотя Соглашение и не является юридическим документом, оно представляет собой «политическое» соглашение, заключенное тремя сторонами.


By mutual agreement, all adjustments made to the business plan, which is an integral part of the financing agreement.



При взаимном согласии, все корректировки вносятся в бизнес-план, который является неотъемлемой частью финансового соглашения.


Three main documents will be inked: an intergovernmental agreement, a commercial contract and a technical agreement.



Будут подписаны три основных документа: межправительственное соглашение, коммерческий контракт и техническое соглашение.


The agreement is recommended as the basis of a collective agreement in industry organizations.



Соглашение рекомендовано, как основа коллективного договора в организациях отрасли.

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[ uhgree-muhnt ]

/ əˈgri mənt /

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noun

the act of agreeing or of coming to a mutual arrangement.

the state of being in accord.

an arrangement that is accepted by all parties to a transaction.

a contract or other document delineating such an arrangement.

unanimity of opinion; harmony in feeling: agreement among the members of the faculty.

Grammar. correspondence in number, case, gender, person, or some other formal category between syntactically connected words, especially between one or more subordinate words and the word or words upon which they depend; selection by one word of the matching formal subclass, or category, in another word syntactically construed with the first.

Law.

  1. an expression of assent by two or more parties to the same object.
  2. the phraseology, written or oral, of an exchange of promises.

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Origin of agreement

1375–1425; late Middle English agrement<Middle French. See agree, -ment

synonym study for agreement

3. Agreement, bargain, compact, contract all suggest a binding arrangement between two or more parties. Agreement ranges in meaning from mutual understanding to binding obligation. Bargain applies particularly to agreements about buying and selling but also to haggling over terms in an agreement. Compact applies to treaties or alliances between nations or to solemn personal pledges. Contract is used especially in law and business for such agreements as are legally enforceable.

OTHER WORDS FROM agreement

in·ter·a·gree·ment, nounnon·a·gree·ment, nounpre·a·gree·ment, nounpro·a·gree·ment, adjective

Words nearby agreement

agree, agreeable, agreeableness, agreeance, agreed, agreement, agrégé, agrément, agrestal, agrestic, agri-

Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

MORE ABOUT AGREEMENT

What is a basic definition of agreement?

Agreement is the state or act of agreeing, meaning coming to a mutually approved arrangement. Agreement is also used to mean a deal in which all parties accept the conditions or a unity of opinion. Agreement has several other senses as a noun.

Agreement is the noun form of the verb agree, which means to be in harmony of feeling or opinion. Agreement, then, means the act of agreeing or a condition in which all people are content with a situation or what they must do. The opposite of agreement is disagreement.

  • Used in a sentence: I thought Jack’s plan was good and nodded my head in agreement with everything he said. 

In a similar sense, an agreement is a deal or arrangement in which all parties accept the terms. An agreement can be an unspoken pact or an actual legal document that has punishments if it isn’t followed.

  • Real-life examples: In a trade agreement between the United States and Canada, both countries must approve of what they sell to each other. You might come to an agreement with your friends to split the cost of a dinner. When renting a car, a customer will sign a rental agreement that outlines how much they will pay the lender if the car is damaged.
  • Used in a sentence: The United Nations negotiated a peace agreement between the two warring countries.

Where does agreement come from?

The first records of agreement come from around 1375. It ultimately comes from Middle French agrément. It combines the verb agree, meaning “to have the same views” or “to give consent ,” with the suffix -ment, that forms a noun describing a state (refreshment), a product (fragment), or a means (ornament).

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How is agreement used in real life?

Agreement is a common word that means an act of agreeing or a deal that all sides mutually agree to.

I’m in agreement with my 22-year old daughter that America’s downfall began with reality TV. Trash!

— RevWendy (@SoulBlossom_Wen) December 13, 2020

The Pentagon and the Federal Emergency Management Agency are negotiating the final terms of an agreement that could see the military provide around 450,000 Covid-19 vaccinations a day https://t.co/8EV0LKkNsN

— CNN (@CNN) January 29, 2021

So socially awkward I just accidentally convinced a door-to-door saleman that I have a wife and can’t commit to his sale without her agreement.

— Rob (@RarkPhoenix) July 21, 2020

Try using agreement!

Is agreement used correctly in the following sentence?

Every member of the club was in agreement, and so we all voted to donate money to the hospital.

Words related to agreement

accord, arrangement, compliance, compromise, concession, mediation, reconciliation, understanding, approval, charter, covenant, deal, lease, negotiation, pact, protocol, settlement, transaction, accession, accommodation

How to use agreement in a sentence

  • Such an agreement currently exists for pandemic influenza, Phelan notes, but not for any other kind of disease or vaccine.

  • After all, he and his appointees have reversed or defanged dozens of other environmental rules, practices, and international agreements during the last four years.

  • I agree with a lot of it…I heard Nancy Pelosi say she doesn’t want to leave until we have an agreement.

  • This decision went hand-in-hand with a bipartisan agreement to offer all registered voters the chance to vote by mail-in absentee ballot or by dropping one off early, according to the Louisville Courier Journal.

  • The good news is that California reached an agreement in August with the US Forest Service to boost these efforts, with a goal of treating a million acres per year for the next two decades.

  • Ronald Reagan approved the agreement and the USTR reviewed Korean practices through the end of his term.

  • In November 2014, that agreement was extended by four months, with some additional restrictions on Iran.

  • The agreement has three main points, all of which Iran has met, the IAEA says.

  • “The CIA has since paid out more than $1 million pursuant to the agreement,” the report notes.

  • Schettino also tried to enter a plea bargain agreement, which ultimately was rejected by the Grosseto court.

  • But no one in Spain and few in Manila as yet could foresee how the fulfilment of the Agreement would be bungled.

  • The commander of this fleet was an Englishman, according to the agreement between them.

  • By their agreement with the owner, the Company have the right of mining under an area of 185 acres, at a royalty of 6d.

  • I do not know that the agreement matters much for a few days up or down.

  • It therefore designates the act by which one enters into an agreement or a covenant with another.

British Dictionary definitions for agreement


noun

the act of agreeing

a settlement, esp one that is legally enforceable; covenant; treaty

a contract or document containing such a settlement

the state of being of the same opinion; concord; harmony

the state of being similar or consistent; correspondence; conformity

Also called: concord grammar the determination of the inflectional form of one word by some grammatical feature, such as number or gender, of another word, esp one in the same sentence

Word Origin for agreement

C14: from Old French

Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Cultural definitions for agreement


A requirement for parts of a sentence in standard written English; the parts must agree, for example, in number and person.

The subject and verb of a clause or simple sentence must agree in person, as in “He is a boy.” The subject, he, and the verb, is, are both in the third person. The subject and verb also must agree in number, as in “We are girls.” The subject, we, and the verb, are, are both plural.

Nouns and pronouns must also agree in number, person, and gender as in “Every boy must mind his manners.” The noun boy and the pronoun his are both singular, both in the third person, and both masculine.

The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition
Copyright © 2005 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

Other forms: agreements

An agreement is made when two parties agree to something. So, for example, a mother might make an agreement with her son not to kiss him in public because, after kindergarten, well, that’s just not cool.

If people’s opinions are in accord, or match one another, then they are in agreement. If a teacher assigns a ten-page paper due the next day, the students would be in agreement that the assignment was unfair. A written or verbal contract can also be called an agreement. An agreement to deliver an article a month for a publication could not be broken simply because you have writer’s block.

Definitions of agreement

  1. noun

    harmony of people’s opinions, actions, or characters

    “the two parties were in
    agreement

    synonyms:

    accord

  2. noun

    compatibility of observations

    “there was no
    agreement between theory and measurement”

    synonyms:

    correspondence

  3. noun

    the verbal act of agreeing

    see moresee less

    Antonyms:

    disagreement

    the speech act of disagreeing or arguing or disputing

    types:

    show 17 types…
    hide 17 types…
    acquiescence, assent

    agreement with a statement or proposal to do something

    concurrence, concurrency

    agreement of results or opinions

    accord, accordance, conformity

    concurrence of opinion

    collusion, connivance

    agreement on a secret plot

    accession, assenting

    agreeing with or consenting to (often unwillingly)

    subscription

    agreement expressed by (or as if expressed by) signing your name

    confirmation, ratification

    making something valid by formally ratifying or confirming it

    concord, concordance, harmony

    agreement of opinions

    endorsement, indorsement, second, secondment

    a speech seconding a motion

    concession

    a point conceded or yielded

    acceptance

    (contract law) words signifying consent to the terms of an offer (thereby creating a contract)

    conceding, concession, yielding

    the act of conceding or yielding

    cahoot

    collusion

    sop

    a concession given to mollify or placate

    judicial admission, stipulation

    (law) an agreement or concession made by parties in a judicial proceeding (or by their attorneys) relating to the business before the court; must be in writing unless they are part of the court record

    takeaway

    a concession made by a labor union to a company that is trying to lower its expenditures

    wage concession

    an agreement to raise wages

    type of:

    speech act

    the use of language to perform some act

  4. noun

    the statement (oral or written) of an exchange of promises

    “they had an
    agreement that they would not interfere in each other’s business”

    synonyms:

    understanding

    see moresee less

    types:

    show 32 types…
    hide 32 types…
    confederacy, conspiracy

    a secret agreement between two or more people to perform an unlawful act

    fair-trade agreement

    an agreement (illegal in the United States) between the manufacturer of a trademarked item of merchandise and its retail distributors to sell the item at a price at or above the price set by the manufacturer

    covenant

    (Bible) an agreement between God and his people in which God makes certain promises and requires certain behavior from them in return

    unilateral contract

    a one-sided agreement whereby you promise to do (or refrain from doing) something in return for a performance (not a promise)

    sale, sales agreement

    an agreement (or contract) in which property is transferred from the seller (vendor) to the buyer (vendee) for a fixed price in money (paid or agreed to be paid by the buyer)

    bargain, deal

    an agreement between parties (usually arrived at after discussion) fixing obligations of each

    working agreement

    an informal agreement to work together

    gentlemen’s agreement

    a personal agreement based on honor and not legally binding

    written agreement

    a legal document summarizing the agreement between parties

    submission

    an agreement between parties in a dispute to abide by the decision of an arbiter

    entente, entente cordiale

    a friendly understanding between political powers

    oral contract

    an agreement that is not in writing and is not signed by the parties but is a real existing contract that lacks only the formal requirement of a memorandum to render it enforceable in litigation

    reservation

    the written record or promise of an arrangement by which accommodations are secured in advance

    settlement

    a conclusive resolution of a matter and disposition of it

    severance agreement

    an agreement on the terms on which an employee will leave

    suicide pact

    an agreement by two or more people to commit suicide together at a given place and time

    contract

    a binding agreement between two or more persons that is enforceable by law

    conspiracy of silence

    a conspiracy not to talk about some situation or event

    conditional sale

    a sale in which the buyer receives title to the property only upon the performance of some condition (usually the full payment of the purchase price)

    execution sale, forced sale, judicial sale, sheriff’s sale

    a sale of property by the sheriff under authority of a court’s writ of execution in order satisfy an unpaid obligation

    submission

    a legal document summarizing an agreement between parties in a dispute to abide by the decision of an arbiter

    compact, concordat, covenant

    a signed written agreement between two or more parties (nations) to perform some action

    indenture

    formal agreement between the issuer of bonds and the bondholders as to terms of the debt

    obligation

    a legal agreement specifying a payment or action and the penalty for failure to comply

    accord, pact, treaty

    a written agreement between two states or sovereigns

    accommodation

    a settlement of differences

    conclusion

    a final settlement

    out-of-court settlement

    resolution of a dispute prior to the rendering of a final decision by the trial court

    property settlement

    (matrimonial law) the division of property owned or acquired by marriage partners during their marriage

    accord and satisfaction

    the settlement of a debt by paying less than the amount demanded in exchange for extinguishing the debt

    golden handshake

    a lucrative severance agreement offered to an employee (usually as an incentive to retire)

    escrow

    a written agreement (or property or money) delivered to a third party or put in trust by one party to a contract to be returned after fulfillment of some condition

    type of:

    statement

    a message that is stated or declared; a communication (oral or written) setting forth particulars or facts etc

  5. noun

    the thing arranged or agreed to

  6. noun

    in grammar, the correspondence between two words

DISCLAIMER: These example sentences appear in various news sources and books to reflect the usage of the word ‘agreement’.
Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Vocabulary.com or its editors.
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