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Let's say a friend of mine repeatedly asked me to go to a concert with them but the music was not to my taste and my friend knew that but kept insisting anyway until I eventually gave in and went to the concert with them.

My question is whether there is a verb/phrase in English that expresses the action of reluctantly accepting doing something just to make the other person stop bringing up the same subject again.

In my language, there is a verb that we use to express this idea, this verb can be roughly translated as "to walk with" in the figurative sense that "I walked with him regarding what he wants". When I tried to think of a synonym in English, the first verb that came to my mind was "to please" but I don't think this verb can be used here since it doesn't deliver the intended meaning.

For example:

He couldn't seem to stop asking me to go with him until I did what he wanted just to _________ him.

What can we use to fill the blank in this sentence?

Eddie Kal
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Mohammad
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    A grammatical note about the answers so far, all of which sound good to my ear: "appease" and "placate" fit in the blank as-is, but "acquiesce" and "give in" would replace the second half of the sentence: "... until I acquiesced." or "... acquiesced to his demands." or "until I gave in [. / to him. / to his demands.]" (I'm not sure if you can say "acquiesced to him" -- it sounds a bit off to me.) Also, agreed with Void that "acquiesce" sounds formal and wouldn't be used in colloquial speech. – Glenn Willen Apr 08 '21 at 22:38
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    I’m surprised no one has mentioned the option which I would argue is most likely to be heard in the exact context given here (with some minor changes to make the sentence more idiomatic): “He wouldn’t stop asking to go with him, so eventually I did what he wanted just to shut him up”. That’s quite informal and not particularly polite, but it is a very common expression. – Janus Bahs Jacquet Apr 09 '21 at 20:40
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    Sometimes we do something for [the sake of] a peaceful life – Michael Harvey Apr 11 '21 at 12:47
  • Broadly, no. Can you think of such a verb in any other language? – Robbie Goodwin Apr 11 '21 at 20:30
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    Or more often, for a quiet life. – Michael Harvey Apr 12 '21 at 11:54

12 Answers12

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to give in is defined as "to finally agree to what someone wants, after refusing for a period of time" (Cambridge English Dictionary).

This sense of "give" used in this metaphor is "to stretch, bend, break, or become less tight under pressure" (Cambridge English Dictionary.

The picture painted by "to give in" is of a barrier such as a door or a dam bending, breaking, and collapsing inward.

David42
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38

Another option is 'acquiesce', which MW defines as "to accept, comply, or submit tacitly or passively "

SoronelHaetir
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