LexBrew
Confusables Entry 01 / 1605 60-second read Everyday

Accept vs. Except

To receive or welcome versus to exclude — near-opposite meanings.

The comparisoni

✗ Wrong

Everyone was invited accept John.

We mean John was left out — that’s exclusion. ‘Accept’ means to receive, so this reads as if John himself was an invitation.

✓ Correct

Everyone was invited except John.

‘Except’ marks the exception: everyone was invited, apart from John.

More examplesii

01

I will except no excuses.

I will accept no excuses.

The verb here is receiving — ‘accept,’ not ‘except.’

02

He accepted the offer except the terms.

He accepted the offer, except for the terms.

With a comma, ‘except’ carves out an exception to something already accepted.

The ruleiii

ACCEPT = receive

ACCEPT receives or agrees (verb). EXCEPT excludes (preposition). One takes in, one leaves out.

Notesiv

Origin

Both descend from Latin *capere* (to take). ‘Accept’ via *accipere* (take to oneself); ‘except’ via *excipere* (take out). The prefixes still do the work — *ad-* toward, *ex-* away from.

Register

Both words are fully standard. ‘Accept’ is almost always the verb; ‘except’ is almost always a preposition.

Watch for

‘Except’ can rarely be a verb meaning ‘to exclude’ — as in ‘present company excepted.’ If you’re not using that set phrase, you don’t need it.

Memory aidv

Remember it like this

Accept begins with A, like Agree. Except begins with Ex-, like Exclude.

A bit of historyvi

Both spellings entered English in the late 14th century, borrowed from Old French. They have been distinguished as separate words since at least Caxton's printings in the 1470s. Usage manuals from Fowler (1926) onward have kept the boundary clear; the persistent sign-error confusion (accepted versus excepted on storefronts) is a 20th-century phenomenon, not a medieval one.

Reviewed 2026-05-01 by LexBrew Editorial. Sources: Merriam-Webster, Oxford English Dictionary, Garner's Modern English Usage.

In the wildvii

Real-world-style usage — how this looks in a sentence people would actually write.

  • Everyone on the team accepted the new policy, except the contractors, whose contracts pre-dated it.
  • She would accept any role, except one that kept her away from her family.

Spottedviii

Specimens from the editorial inbox — lines that did, in fact, get published.

  • “We except all major credit cards.”

    — A storefront sign, photographed 2019

  • “No applicant will be excepted without the full transcript.”

    — A university admissions email, 2021

Test yourselfix

Which sentence uses the right word?

Quick duel 4 questions · ~30 seconds

Which is right?

You might also like 8 related
↑↓Navigate Open EscClose All results →