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    admit
    /ədˈmɪt/

    verb

    • 1. confess to be true or to be the case: "the Home Office finally admitted that several prisoners had been injured" Similar acknowledgeconfessrevealmake knownOpposite denyconceal
    • 2. allow (someone) to enter a place: "old-age pensioners are admitted free to the museum" Similar let inallow entrypermit entrygrant entrance toOpposite excludebarexpel

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. ADMIT definition: 1. to agree that something is true, especially unwillingly: 2. to accept that you have failed and…. Learn more.

  3. The meaning of ADMIT is to allow scope for : permit. How to use admit in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Admit.

  4. Admit definition: to allow to enter; grant or afford entrance to. See examples of ADMIT used in a sentence.

  5. If you admit that something bad, unpleasant, or embarrassing is true, you agree, often unwillingly, that it is true. I am willing to admit that I do make mistakes. [ VERB that ]

  6. 1. To afford possibility: a problem that admits of no solution. 2. To allow entrance; afford access: a door admitting to the hall. 3. To make acknowledgment; confess: admitted to committing the crime; admitted to a weakness for sweets. n. One who is admitted.

  7. make a possibility or provide opportunity for; permit to be attainable or cause to remain. verb. allow to enter; grant entry to. “We cannot admit non-members into our club building” “This pipe admits air” synonyms: allow in, intromit, let in. see more. verb. serve as a means of entrance. “This ticket will admit one adult to the show” synonyms:

  8. admit. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English ad‧mit /ədˈmɪt/ S2 W1 verb (admitted, admitting) 1 accept truth [intransitive, transitive] to agree unwillingly that something is true or that someone else is right ‘Okay, so maybe I was a little bit scared, ’ Jenny admitted. admit (that) You may not like her, but you have to admit ...