admit

admit
əd'mit
past tense, past participle - admitted; verb
1) (to allow to enter: This ticket admits one person.) admitir, permitir la entrada
2) (to say that one accepts as true: He admitted (that) he was wrong.) admitir, reconocer
- admission
- admittance
- admittedly

admit vb
1. admitir / dejar entrar
women are not admitted to this club en este club no se admiten mujeres
2. ingresar
he was admitted to hospital lo ingresaron en el hospital
3. admitir / reconocer / confesar
he admitted that he was wrong reconoció que estaba equivocado
she admitted to the theft se confesó culpable del robo
El pasado y participio pasado de admit se escribe admitted; el gerundio se escribe admitting
admit
tr[əd'mɪt]
transitive verb (pt & pp admitted, ger admitting)
1 (allow in) admitir; (to hospital) ingresar
she was admitted to St James' yesterday la ingresaron en el hospital de St James ayer
2 (acknowledge) reconocer; (confess) confesar
\
SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALL
to admit to defeat darse por vencido,-a
to admit to doing something confesarse culpable de hacer algo
admit [æd'mɪt, əd-] vt, -mitted ; -mitting
1) : admitir, dejar entrar
the museum admits children: el museo deja entrar a los niños
2) acknowledge: reconocer, admitir
admit
v.
aceptar v.
admitir v.
agregar v.
conceder v.
confesar v.
consentir v.
reconocer v.
(§pres: reconozco, reconoces...)
əd'mɪt
-tt- transitive verb
1)
a) (allow entry) dejar entrar, admitir (frml); \<\<light/air\>\> permitir or dejar entrar

admit one — entrada individual

b) \<\<patient\>\> ingresar
2)
a) (confess) \<\<crime/mistake\>\> admitir, reconocer*

to admit something to somebody — confesarle* algo a alguien

I must admit that ... — tengo que admitir or reconocer que ...

he admitted stealing the money — admitió haber robado el dinero

b) (acknowledge) \<\<truth/validity\>\> reconocer*
Phrasal Verbs:
[ǝd'mɪt]
VT
1) (=allow to enter) [+ person] dejar entrar; [+ patient] (to hospital) ingresar; [+ air, light] dejar pasar, dejar entrar

children not admitted — se prohíbe la entrada a los menores de edad

this ticket admits two — entrada para dos personas

to be admitted to the Academy — ingresar en la Academia

to be admitted to hospital — ingresar en el hospital

admitting office — (US) (Med) oficina f de ingresos

2) (=acknowledge) reconocer; [+ crime] confesar; [+ error] reconocer

it is hard, I admit — es difícil, lo reconozco

it must be admitted that ... — hay que reconocer que ...

I admit nothing! — ¡no tengo nada que confesar!

* * *
[əd'mɪt]
-tt- transitive verb
1)
a) (allow entry) dejar entrar, admitir (frml); \<\<light/air\>\> permitir or dejar entrar

admit one — entrada individual

b) \<\<patient\>\> ingresar
2)
a) (confess) \<\<crime/mistake\>\> admitir, reconocer*

to admit something to somebody — confesarle* algo a alguien

I must admit that ... — tengo que admitir or reconocer que ...

he admitted stealing the money — admitió haber robado el dinero

b) (acknowledge) \<\<truth/validity\>\> reconocer*
Phrasal Verbs:

English-spanish dictionary. 2013.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Mira otros diccionarios:

  • 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

Compartir el artículo y extractos

Link directo
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”