admit

admit
əd'mit
past tense, past participle - admitted; verb
1) (to allow to enter: This ticket admits one person.) slippe inn, gi adgang
2) (to say that one accepts as true: He admitted (that) he was wrong.) innrømme
- admission
- admittance
- admittedly
innrømme
--------
tilstå
--------
vedgå
verb \/ədˈmɪt\/
1) slippe inn, la komme inn
he admitted me into the house
2) ta inn, ta imot, oppta, oppta som medlem, gi adgang
only one hundred boys are admitted to the school every year
skolen tar bare inn 100 gutter årlig
admit as partner
oppta som kompanjong
this ticket admits two persons
billetten gir adgang til\/gjelder for to personer
3) innrømme, vedgå, erkjenne, tilstå
4) godta
admit as evidence
godta ført som bevis
5) romme, ha plass til
admit of tillate, gi mulighet for
the poem admits of two interpretations
diktet kan (for)tolkes på to forskjellige måter
admit to (om billett) gir adgang til\/for innrømme (at), tilstå (at)
he admitted to murder
I must admit to feeling ashamed
jeg må innrømme at jeg er skamfull
innlegge på
admit to hospital
innlegge på sykehus
not admitted ingen adgang

English-Norwegian dictionary. 2013.

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  • admit — ad‧mit [ədˈmɪt] verb admitted PTandPPX admitting PRESPARTX [transitive] 1. to allow someone to enter a place or become a member of a group, organization, school etc: admit somebody/​something to something • Both republics are now hoping to be… …   Financial and business terms

  • admit — ad·mit vb ad·mit·ted, ad·mit·ting vt 1: to concede as true or valid: make an admission of 2: to allow to be entered or offered admitted the document into evidence admit a will to probate vi: to make acknowledgment …   Law dictionary

  • admit — 1. Admit of is now only used in the meaning ‘to allow as possible, leave room for’ (always with an abstract object: The circumstances will not admit of delay / It seems to admit of so many interpretations), and even here the construction seems… …   Modern English usage

  • Admit — Ad*mit , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Admitted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Admitting}.] [OE. amitten, L. admittere, admissum; ad + mittere to send: cf. F. admettre, OF. admettre, OF. ametre. See {Missile}.] 1. To suffer to enter; to grant entrance, whether into a …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • admit to — ● bail * * * admit to [phrasal verb] admit to (something) : to admit (something) : to acknowledge the truth or existence of (something) He reluctantly admitted to knowing her. [=he admitted knowing her] He admitted to his guilt. = He admitted to… …   Useful english dictionary

  • admit — [v1] allow entry or use accept, be big on*, bless, buy, concede, enter, entertain, give access, give the nod*, give thumbs up*, grant, harbor, house, initiate, introduce, let, let in, lodge, okay, permit, receive, shelter, sign*, sign off on*,… …   New thesaurus

  • admit — ► VERB (admitted, admitting) 1) confess to be true or to be the case. 2) allow to enter. 3) receive into a hospital for treatment. 4) accept as valid. 5) (admit of) allow the possibility of …   English terms dictionary

  • admit — réadmit …   Dictionnaire des rimes

  • admit — (v.) late 14c., let in, from L. admittere to allow to enter, let in, let come, give access, from ad to (see AD (Cf. ad )) + mittere let go, send (see MISSION (Cf. mission)). Sense of to concede as valid or true is first recorded early 15c.… …   Etymology dictionary

  • admit of — Admit, permit, allow, bear, be capable of …   New dictionary of synonyms

  • admit — 1 *receive, accept, take Analogous words: allow, permit, suffer (see LET): *harbor, entertain, shelter, lodge, house Antonyms: eject, expel Contrasted words: *exclude, debar, shut out: bar, obstruct, block, *hinder …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

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