Why "accommodate" feels like a trick
English wants to be efficient. When a word drags two consonants in a row, we compress the sound and hear only one — so your brain writes only a single c or m. In reality, the Latin accommodare doubled them on purpose: ac- (toward) + commodare (to make fit). The first c pulls the accent toward comfort, and the second c starts the root that carries the double m. Without both pairs you lose the word's architecture.
Common mistakes:
One letter missing from each pair
Only one c
Double m, wrong vowel
Lose both doubles
The mnemonic you can picture
Think of a boutique hotel with double comfort:
two plush couches (CC)
and two memory foam mattresses (MM)
No guest gets checked in unless every seat and bed is in place — that is the only way to accommodate them.
The doubles are the comfort requirements: CC for the roomy lobby, MM for the twin suites. You can remember the letters by rehearsing the scene each time you write the word — a double-cushioned welcome and double mattresses equal double letters.
Break it apart
Prefix
ac-
The prefix ac- pulls everything toward the word's goal: fitting, supplying, or making room.
Root
commod-
From Latin commodare, meaning "to make fit." The double C assimilates to keep the flow — the second c marks the start of the root that also uses double m.
The doubles
CC + MM
Treat both sets as handshake rules: two C's for a velvety entrance, two M's for the mattress zone. Spell them together, and the syllables nail themselves down.
Practice sentences
Write it once. Write it right.
The renovated lodge can accommodate both the orchestra and the speaker team.
She asked if the school could accommodate the volunteers with a pantry shelf.
Please accommodate the late arrivals with extra chairs in the front row.
The tour company promised to accommodate every request before the bus departed.
Spot the correct spelling
Related double-letter words
These siblings also pack double consonants for emphasis. For more double-letter tricks, visit How to Spell Unnecessary and How to Spell Rhythm.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the correct spelling of accommodate?
A-C-C-O-M-M-O-D-A-T-E. Commit to both Cs for the welcoming lobby and both Ms for the sleeping room — they are the pillars of the word.
Why is accommodate hard to spell?
We hear the word as if it had single consonants because English collapses the double sounds. The Latin root commodare doubles them for emphasis, so letting either letter go is how the mistake sneaks in.
What's a trick to remember how to spell accommodate?
Imagine the lobby with two deluxe couches (CC) and two memory foam mattresses (MM) that must be ready before anyone can check in. Say the scene aloud with the doubles spelled out slowly to lock them in.
Practice this scene with SpellCamp's spaced repetition so the doubles go from 'extra' to automatic.