-
1 ♦ (to) admit
♦ (to) admit /ədˈmɪt/A v. t.1 ammettere; riconoscere; confessare: to admit defeat, riconoscere la propria sconfitta; to admit having paid bribes, ammettere di aver pagato tangenti; He admitted five charges, si riconobbe colpevole di cinque capi d'accusa; I admit I was too hasty, riconosco di essere stato troppo precipitoso2 ammettere; accettare; lasciar entrare: to be admitted to Oxford University, essere ammesso all'università di Oxford; We were admitted free, ci hanno lasciato entrare gratis; l'ingresso era gratuito3 ( di biglietto, ecc.) consentire l'ingresso a; essere valido per: This ticket only admits to the park, questo biglietto consente solo l'ingresso al parco; Admits two, valido per due persone5 accettare come valido; accogliere: to admit a claim, accogliere un reclamo; (leg.) to admit evidence, accettare proveB v. i.1 – to admit of, ammettere; lasciare adito a: to admit of a delay, ammettere un ritardo; It admits of no doubt, non lascia adito a dubbi2 – to admit to, ammettere; riconoscere: to admit to a crime, riconoscersi colpevole di un crimine; I admit to being sceptical about it, riconosco di essere scettico in proposito; ammetto il mio scetticismo3 – to admit to, dare accesso a: This door admits to the back garden, questa porta dà accesso al giardino sul retro.NOTA D'USO: - to admit to do o to admit doing?- -
2 ♦ (to) admit
♦ (to) admit /ədˈmɪt/A v. t.1 ammettere; riconoscere; confessare: to admit defeat, riconoscere la propria sconfitta; to admit having paid bribes, ammettere di aver pagato tangenti; He admitted five charges, si riconobbe colpevole di cinque capi d'accusa; I admit I was too hasty, riconosco di essere stato troppo precipitoso2 ammettere; accettare; lasciar entrare: to be admitted to Oxford University, essere ammesso all'università di Oxford; We were admitted free, ci hanno lasciato entrare gratis; l'ingresso era gratuito3 ( di biglietto, ecc.) consentire l'ingresso a; essere valido per: This ticket only admits to the park, questo biglietto consente solo l'ingresso al parco; Admits two, valido per due persone5 accettare come valido; accogliere: to admit a claim, accogliere un reclamo; (leg.) to admit evidence, accettare proveB v. i.1 – to admit of, ammettere; lasciare adito a: to admit of a delay, ammettere un ritardo; It admits of no doubt, non lascia adito a dubbi2 – to admit to, ammettere; riconoscere: to admit to a crime, riconoscersi colpevole di un crimine; I admit to being sceptical about it, riconosco di essere scettico in proposito; ammetto il mio scetticismo3 – to admit to, dare accesso a: This door admits to the back garden, questa porta dà accesso al giardino sul retro.NOTA D'USO: - to admit to do o to admit doing?- -
3 allow
[ə'laʊ] 1.1) (authorize) permettere a, autorizzare [ person]; permettere, autorizzare [action, change]; lasciare, concedere [choice, freedom]to allow sb. to do sth. — permettere a qcn. di fare qcs., autorizzare qcn. a fare qcs.
to allow sb. in — lasciare, fare entrare qcn.
2) (enable)to allow sb., sth. to do — permettere a qcn., qcs. di fare
3) (allocate) calcolare, prevedere4) (concede) [ referee] concedere [ goal]; [ insurer] accogliere [ claim]; [ supplier] praticare, fare [ discount]5) (accept) ammettere, accettare"no dogs allowed" — "vietato l'ingresso ai cani"
7) (condone) permettere, tollerare [rudeness, swearing]2.verbo riflessivo to allow oneself1) (grant) concedersi, permettersi [drink, treat]2) (allocate) calcolare, prevedere3) (let) lasciarsi•* * *1) (not to forbid or prevent: He allowed me to enter; Playing football in the street is not allowed.) permettere2) ((with for) to take into consideration when judging or deciding: These figures allow for price rises.) tenere conto di; ammettere3) (to give, especially for a particular purpose or regularly: His father allows him too much money.) dare•- make allowance for* * *[ə'laʊ] 1.1) (authorize) permettere a, autorizzare [ person]; permettere, autorizzare [action, change]; lasciare, concedere [choice, freedom]to allow sb. to do sth. — permettere a qcn. di fare qcs., autorizzare qcn. a fare qcs.
to allow sb. in — lasciare, fare entrare qcn.
2) (enable)to allow sb., sth. to do — permettere a qcn., qcs. di fare
3) (allocate) calcolare, prevedere4) (concede) [ referee] concedere [ goal]; [ insurer] accogliere [ claim]; [ supplier] praticare, fare [ discount]5) (accept) ammettere, accettare"no dogs allowed" — "vietato l'ingresso ai cani"
7) (condone) permettere, tollerare [rudeness, swearing]2.verbo riflessivo to allow oneself1) (grant) concedersi, permettersi [drink, treat]2) (allocate) calcolare, prevedere3) (let) lasciarsi• -
4 recognize
['rekəgnaɪz]1) (identify) riconoscere [person, sound, place, symptom] (by da; as come)2) (acknowledge) riconoscere [problem, fact]; (officially) riconoscere, legittimare [government, claim]* * *1) (to see, hear etc (a person, thing etc) and know who or what that person, thing etc is, because one has seen or heard him, it etc before: I recognized his voice/handwriting; I recognized him by his voice.) riconoscere2) (to admit, acknowledge: Everyone recognized his skill.) riconosce3) (to be willing to have political relations with: Many countries were unwilling to recognize the new republic.) riconoscere4) (to accept as valid, well-qualified etc: I don't recognize the authority of this court.) riconoscere•- recognisable
- recognizably
- recognisably
- recognition* * *['rekəgnaɪz]1) (identify) riconoscere [person, sound, place, symptom] (by da; as come)2) (acknowledge) riconoscere [problem, fact]; (officially) riconoscere, legittimare [government, claim]
См. также в других словарях:
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
claim — verb. There are several areas of difficulty with this word. The first concerns claim + that, and the second claim + to. The third concerns the expression to claim responsibility. 1. claim + that. In this construction, claim should not be used as… … Modern English usage
claim — claim1 [ kleım ] verb *** ▸ 1 say something is true ▸ 2 say something is yours ▸ 3 when something kills someone ▸ 4 need attention/time ▸ 5 win prize in sport 1. ) transitive to say that something is true, even though there is no definite proof:… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
claim — v 1. demand, require, command, have rights to, deserve, be entitled to, lay claim to, pretend, Sl. have dibs on; expropriate, requisition, commandeer, exact. 2. assert, declare, proclaim, predicate, allege, aver, asseverate; maintain, hold,… … A Note on the Style of the synonym finder
claim responsibility for — to admit to A usage of terrorists, especially in Northern Ireland, who saw murder and arson as creditworthy: He turned on the radio... is just coming in of a bomb explosion... no one has yet claimed responsibility. (McCrum, 1991) … How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms
List of patent claim types — This is a list of special types of claims that may be found in a patent or patent application. For explanations about independent and dependent claims and about the different categories of claims, i.e. product or apparatus claims (claims… … Wikipedia
Security for a claim — (in Russia) the acceptance of measures, ensuring realities of execution of the future court verdict or arbitration . Security for a claim is a warranty of protection of claimants interests. The court or arbitration court admits and accepts the… … Wikipedia
make no claim to be something — phrase to admit that you do not have a particular quality or ability I make no claim to be knowledgeable on the subject. Thesaurus: to try to show that an idea or belief is wrongsynonym Main entry: claim … Useful english dictionary
make no claim to be something — to admit that you do not have a particular quality or ability I make no claim to be knowledgeable on the subject … English dictionary
The Church — The Church † Catholic Encyclopedia ► The Church The term church (Anglo Saxon, cirice, circe; Modern German, Kirche; Sw., Kyrka) is the name employed in the Teutonic languages to render the Greek ekklesia (ecclesia), the term by which… … Catholic encyclopedia
William Bernard Petre, 12th Baron Petre — William Bernard, 12th Baron Petre (20 December, 1817 – 4 July, 1884) “a pattern of charity and piety”, was an enthusiastic builder of churches. To a greater or lesser extent, he was responsible for new churches in Brentwood, Chipping Ongar,… … Wikipedia