The sentence "entertain this request" is correct and usable in written English. You can use it when someone is asking you to consider something, usually a request or an idea. For example, "I understand that this may not be the best solution, but please entertain this request for a moment.".
The directors were not willing to entertain the request unless the takeover bid was raised to at least $14 a share, one of these people said.
Peg Breen, president of the New York Landmarks Conservancy, a preservationist group, said that the city has so far declined to entertain the request, though last year it designated two other Harlem Catholic churches as landmarks: All Saints, on East 129th Street, and St. Aloysius, on West 132nd Street.
As for Mr. Perez-Olivo's interest in taking a lie-detector test, Ms. DiFiore said in a news conference that her office "would not entertain that request," adding, "we all know that polygraph tests are not admissible because it's not reliable".
Sen. Lindsey Graham says Russia's request to interrogate US citizens is "absurd": For "the administration to even entertain this shows to me how naive they are about what is actually going in Russia" https://t.co/DjuJrYu5eA https://t.co/auuxDORZtk.
Could you entertain this point in a supplementary data analysis?
Don't entertain this kind of conversation.
I rarely entertain those requests, though I'm sure I've been blacklisted by some companies for not writing more favourably about them.
Awesome tool! I started using it one year ago and I never had to look for another app
Ha Thuy Vy
MA of Applied Linguistic, Maquarie University, Australia