Reconcile
rec·on·cile
/ˈrekənˌsīl/
verb
verb: reconcile; 3rd person present: reconciles; past tense: reconciled; past participle: reconciled; gerund or present participle: reconciling
restore friendly relations between.
"she wanted to be reconciled with her father"
cause to coexist in harmony; make or show to be compatible.
"a landscape in which inner and outer vision were reconciled"
synonyms: make compatible, harmonize, square, make harmonious, synthesize, make congruent, cause to be in agreement, cause to sit happily/easily with; More
adjust, balance, attune;
raresyncretize
"it wasn't easy trying to reconcile his religious beliefs with his career"
make (one account) consistent with another, especially by allowing for transactions begun but not yet completed.
"it is not necessary to reconcile the cost accounts to the financial accounts"
settle (a disagreement).
"advice on how to reconcile the conflict"
synonyms: reunite, bring (back) together (again), restore friendly relations between, restore harmony between, make peace between, resolve differences between, bring to terms; More
pacify, appease, placate, propitiate, mollify;
rareconciliate
"the news reconciled us"
antonyms: estrange, alienate
make someone accept (a disagreeable or unwelcome thing).
"he could not reconcile himself to the thought of his mother stocking shelves"
synonyms: accept, come to accept, resign oneself to, come to terms with, learn to live with, get used to, make the best of, submit to, accommodate oneself to, adjust oneself to, become accustomed to, acclimatize oneself to; More
grin and bear it;
informallike it or lump it
"the creditors had to reconcile themselves to drastic losses of income and capital"