accommodate
verb
1 backpacking tourists can be accommodated in dormitories:
lodge, house, put up, billet, quarter, board, take in, provide shelter for, shelter, give a bed to, give someone a roof over their head, provide a roof over someone's head, harbour, make room for, give accommodation to, provide with accommodation, provide accommodation for.
3 the company altered the launch date in order to accommodate a major customer:
help, fit in with, allow for, assist, aid, lend a hand to, oblige, serve, do someone a service, meet the needs/wants of, do someone a good turn, favour, do someone a favour, cater for, indulge, pander to, humour, gratify, satisfy.
▷antonyms hinder.
4 she was desperately trying to accommodate herself to her new position:
adjust, adapt, attune, accustom, get (someone) accustomed, get (someone) used, habituate, acclimatize, assimilate, acculturate;
familiarize someone/oneself with, find one's way around, come to terms with, come to accept, learn to live with;
integrate, domesticate;
find one's feet, get one's bearings, become naturalized, become seasoned;
North American acclimate.
accommodate Oxford Dictionary of English