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- ADMITTED Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com
ADMITTED definition: allowed to enter; granted entrance or entry See examples of admitted used in a sentence
- ADMIT Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
acknowledge, admit, own, avow, confess mean to disclose against one's will or inclination acknowledge implies the disclosing of something that has been or might be concealed admit implies reluctance to disclose, grant, or concede and refers usually to facts rather than their implications
- ADMITTED | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary
admitted Add to word list past simple and past participle of admit (Definition of admitted from the Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary Thesaurus © Cambridge University Press)
- ADMITTED definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
It was a rare art, he reluctantly admitted, to be able to rattle on like Dee without getting right up your nose Jones would have started working here about the same time as she was admitted → See admit Click for English pronunciations, examples sentences, video
- Admitted - definition of admitted by The Free Dictionary
To grant to be real, valid, or true; acknowledge or concede: Even proponents of the technology admit that
- admitted - WordReference. com Dictionary of English
admit is a verb, admissible is an adjective, admission is a noun: The criminal admitted his guilt The evidence was not admissible in a court of law His statement was an admission of guilt ad•mit (ad mit′), v , -mit•ted, -mit•ting grant or afford entrance to: to admit a student to college
- Admitted or admited? - Spelling Which Is Correct How To Spell
Correct spelling, explanation: admitted is a word of Latin origin and it appeared in Middle English In Latin, it had the form admittere while in English the base form is to admit
- admit - Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Online
• You may not like Joan, but you have to admit that she's good at her job • New chairman, Tory councillor Keith Bland admitted that the council had made mistakes • Even Packard admitted to himself that the unusual wildflower must have been a fluke, or misidentified
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