admitting / ædˈmɪt /

承认认可接受承認

admitting2 个定义

v. 有主动词 verb

ad·mit·ted, ad·mit·ting.

  1. to allow to enter; grant or afford entrance to: to admit a student to college.
  2. to give right or means of entrance to: This ticket admits two people.
  3. to permit to exercise a certain function or privilege: admitted to the bar.
v. 无主动词 verb

ad·mit·ted, ad·mit·ting.

  1. to permit entrance; give access: This door admits to the garden.
  2. to permit the possibility of something; allow: The contract admits of no other interpretation.

admitting 近义词

v. 动词 verb

allow entry or use

v. 动词 verb

confess, acknowledge

更多admitting例句

  1. It was “serendipity,” she laughs, admitting that the idea came to her while speaking to a client — a large, burly man crammed into a small, decorated closet space.
  2. Although the man who named misophonia admits the name is imperfect.
  3. When I asked LoTemplio what kinds of things she would want to learn by looking at the brain, she admitted that “some might argue you don’t even need to look at the brain if you’re just observing these kinds of cognitive improvements.”
  4. In a recent interview, Luhnow maintained he would have stopped the cheating “had I known about it,” admitting “it was bad” and “shouldn’t have happened.”
  5. Point guard Kihei Clark participated in pickup games in Los Angeles, admitting it probably was a bit risky given social distancing protocols.
  6. Klein paints a rosy picture of the charter schools, while admitting that not all outperformed traditional public schools.
  7. Last week, a British woman committed suicide after admitting she had harassed the McCanns online.
  8. Yet, while admitting that TMZ sometimes performs a valuable public service, not everyone is an unalloyed fan.
  9. Her achievements finally led the United States Polo Association to begin admitting women in 1972.
  10. Beaird seemed to be either admitting perjury or committing it.
  11. Were it so, there should be no ground for admitting the fact of any covenant even among men.
  12. In admitting a member, if no form of election has been prescribed, each candidate must be elected separately.
  13. The company is composed of three contracting persons without admitting therein any other whatever.
  14. The proceeding then is much like an equity trial with perhaps a wider latitude in admitting evidence bearing on the inquiry.
  15. He looked younger, too, and no one could help admitting that he had that grand air that denotes birth and breeding.