Cause to be more favorably inclined; gain the good will of.
To bring to a state of peace, quiet, ease, calm, or contentment.
1 To appease ye, I'll wait a few more days before returnin' home.
2 I spent year after year trying to appease them, to no avail.
3 And about Europe's attempts to appease Hitler before the Second World War.
4 In order to appease it, it was deemed necessary to offer sacrifices.
5 Who knows what was really said, what was altered to appease Rome?
6 Miliband also said Cameron's attempts to appease Ukip were doomed to fail.
7 Mr Clark said cull might appease people but it wouldn't be effective.
8 Deutsche plans cutbacks to appease investors unhappy about its stock market underperformance.
9 King Stanislaus quits Alranstadt to appease the Troubles In Poland: Charles XII.
10 But both leaders can now point to victories to appease their supporters.
11 The treaty doesn't matter, honestly-ifthat will appease him, I'll sign it.
12 The EU will have made a last-minute attempt to appease sceptical MPs.
13 The guards vainly endeavoured to appease the, in many cases, half-frenzied creatures.
14 Yet she hastened to appease Reiko, whose friendship she dreaded to lose.
15 The junta's decision to lift martial law has failed to appease critics.
16 It may also appease the anti-EU camp in his ruling Conservative Party.
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Об этом термине appease
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Appease в диалектах
Соединенные Штаты Америки