Confront vs Accost - What's the difference?
confront | accost |
To stand or meet facing, especially in competition, hostility or defiance; to come face to face with; to oppose; to challenge.
To deal with.
To something bring face to face with.
To come up against; to encounter.
To engage in confrontation.
To set a thing side by side with; to compare.
To put a thing facing to; to set in contrast to.
To approach and speak to boldly or aggressively, as with a demand or request.
*{{quote-news, date = 21 August 2012
, first = Ed
, last = Pilkington
, title = Death penalty on trial: should Reggie Clemons live or die?
, newspaper = The Guardian
, url = http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/aug/21/death-penalty-trial-reggie-clemons?newsfeed=true
, page =
, passage = The Missouri prosecutors' case against Clemons, based partly on incriminating testimony given by his co-defendants, was that Clemons was part of a group of four youths who accosted the sisters on the Chain of Rocks Bridge one dark night in April 1991.
}}
(obsolete) To join side to side; to border; hence, to sail along the coast or side of.
* So much [of Lapland] as accosts the sea. - Fuller
(obsolete) To approach; to come up to.
To speak to first; to address; to greet.
* Milton
* 1847 , , (Jane Eyre), Chapter XVIII
(obsolete) To adjoin; to lie alongside.
* Spenser
* Fuller
To solicit sexually.
In transitive terms the difference between confront and accost
is that confront is to put a thing facing to; to set in contrast to while accost is to speak to first; to address; to greet.As a noun accost is
address; greeting.confront
English
Verb
(en verb)- We should confront him about the missing money.
Derived terms
* confrontation * confrontational * confronter * confrontmentaccost
English
Verb
(en verb)- (Shakespeare)
- Him, Satan thus accosts .
- She approached the basin, and bent over it as if to fill her pitcher; she again lifted it to her head. The personage on the well-brink now seemed to accost her; to make some request—"She hasted, let down her pitcher on her hand, and gave him to drink."
- the shores which to the sea accost
- so much [of Lapland] as accosts the sea