Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary · 1913

Accommodate

Accommodate ({not transcribed}) , transitive verb

[Latin accommodatus, past participle of accommodare; ad + commodare to make fit, help; con- + modus measure, proportion. See Mode.]

1.
To render fit, suitable, or correspondent; to adapt; to conform; as, to accommodate ourselves to circumstances.
They accommodate their counsels to his inclination. — Addison
2.
To bring into agreement or harmony; to reconcile; to compose; to adjust; to settle; as, to accommodate differences, a dispute, etc.
3.
To furnish with something desired, needed, or convenient; to favor; to oblige; as, to accommodate a friend with a loan or with lodgings.
4.
To show the correspondence of; to apply or make suit by analogy; to adapt or fit, as teachings to accidental circumstances, statements to facts, etc.; as, to accommodate prophecy to events.

Accommodate , intransitive verb

To adapt one's self; to be conformable or adapted. [Rare] — Boyle

Accommodate ({not transcribed}) , adjective

[Latin accommodatus, past participle of accommodare.]

Suitable; fit; adapted; as, means accommodate to end. [Archaic] — Tillotson