Accept or Except?
The Quick Answer
Accept (verb) (1) to hold something as true, (2) to receive something willingly, and (3) to answer yesExcept (preposition) (1) apart from, excluding
Except (conjunction) (1) but, if not the fact that
Except (verb) (1) to exclude
Accept and Except
There is often confusion over the words accept and except. They sound similar, but their meanings are very different.
Click on the Two Correct Sentences
(Interactive Game)
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Accept
To accept is a verb. It has several meanings:To hold something as true.
- The officer accepts your point and has decided to let you off with a caution.
- I accept she may have been tired, but that's still no excuse.
- I accept this award on behalf of the whole cast.
- Do you accept dogs in your hotel?
- Please accept my resignation. I don't want to belong to any club that will accept me as a member.
(Groucho Marx)
- The minister would love to accept the invitation to your ball, but she has a prior engagement.
Except
The word except is most commonly seen as a preposition. However, it can also be used a conjunction and very occasionally as a verb.Except as a preposition means apart from, not including, or excluding.
For example:
- I can resist everything except temptation.
(Oscar Wilde) - I have nothing to declare except my genius.
(Oscar Wilde) - Marge, don't discourage the boy! Weaseling out of things is important to learn. It's what separates us from the animals...except the weasel.
(Homer Simpson) - It has been said that democracy is the worst form of government except all the others that have been tried.
(Winston Churchill)
For example:
- I would go swimming, except I am scared of big fish.
For example:
- You are excepted from the ruling.

A Video Summary
Here is a short video summarizing the difference between accept and except.Interactive Exercise
Here are three randomly selected questions from a larger exercise, which can be edited and printed to create exercise worksheets.See Also
adverse or averse? advice or advise? affect or effect? appraise or apprise? avenge or revenge? bare or bear? complement or compliment? dependant or dependent? discreet or discrete? disinterested or uninterested? e.g. or i.e.? envy or jealousy? imply or infer? its or it's? material or materiel? poisonous or venomous? practice or practise? principal or principle? tenant or tenet? who's or whose?What are prepositions? What are conjunctions? What are nouns? What are verbs? List of easily confused words



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