English edit

Etymology edit

non- +‎ accommodating

Adjective edit

nonaccommodating (comparative more nonaccommodating, superlative most nonaccommodating)

  1. Unaccommodating.
    • 1978, United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Finance, Revenue Act of 1978, page 874:
      The estimated effects of each proposal, assuming nonaccommodating monetary policy, are shown in Tables 10-18.
    • 1999, Torben Iversen, Contested Economic Institutions, page 111:
      The logic is that sheltered unions will exploit their capacity to externalize the costs of militancy in a decentralized system unless they are deterred from doing so by a credible government commitment to a nonaccommodating policy rule.
    • 2009, Lisa Capps, Elinor Ochs, Constructing Panic: The Discourse of Agoraphobia, page 99:
      Meg dwells on the unreasonableness of her nonaccommodating stance and does not acknowledge that she has successfully looked out for her best interests.
    • 2015, Marc Lavoie, Louis-Philippe Rochon, Mario Seccareccia, Money and Macrodynamics:
      The federal funds rate will rise, which is consistent with the horizontalist argument: the central bank will most likely adopt a nonaccommodating policy only when it wants to affect the rate of interest.
    • 2018, Jake Harwood, Jessica Gasiorek, Herbert D. Pierson, Language, Communication, and Intergroup Relations:
      We rarely develop or maintain (voluntary) relationships with those who we feel are nonaccommodating, or those with whom we don't feel like we're on the same page.