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1 ♦ admission
♦ admission /ədˈmɪʃn/n.1 riconoscimento (della verità di qc.); ammissione; confessione: admission of guilt, ammissione di colpevolezza; tacit admission, implicito riconoscimento; by your own admission, per tua stessa ammissione; come tu stesso ammetti; a damaging admission, un'ammissione compromettente2 ammissione; accettazione: admission to a club, ammissione a un circolo; admission to the EU, ammissione all'Unione europea3 [u] entrata; ingresso: free admission, ingresso libero; to give admission to, permettere l'ingresso di; lasciar entrare; admission fee, prezzo del biglietto d'ingresso; admission ticket, biglietto d'ingresso4 (prezzo di) ingresso: Admission is €2, l'ingresso costa 2 euro● (in USA) Admission Day, giorno dell'Ammissione NOTE DI CULTURA: Admission Day: festa di alcuni Stati americani, per celebrare l'ammissione all'Unione □ (leg.) admission of evidence, ammissione di prova.NOTA D'USO: - admission o admittance?- -
2 tantamount to
(having the same effect as; equivalent to: His silence is tantamount to an admission of guilt.) equivalente -
3 acknowledgement
[ək'nɒlɪdʒmənt] 1.1) (admission) (of fact, authority) riconoscimento m.; (of error, guilt) riconoscimento m., ammissione f.in acknowledgement of sth. — in segno di riconoscenza per qcs.; come riconoscimento di qcs
2) (confirmation of receipt) avviso m. di ricevimento3) (recognition of presence) cenno m. (di riconoscimento)2.nome plurale acknowledgements (in book etc.) ringraziamenti m.* * *acknowledgement, acknowledgment /əkˈnɒlɪdʒmənt/n.1 [cu] ( anche leg.) riconoscimento; ammissione: the acknowledgement of a difficulty, l'ammissione (o il riconoscimento dell'esistenza) di una difficoltà; acknowledgement of liability, ammissione di responsabilità; the acknowledgement of a natural child, il riconoscimento di un figlio naturale2 [u] segno di gratitudine (o di riconoscenza, di apprezzamento); riconoscimento: in acknowledgement of, in segno di riconoscenza per; come riconoscimento di3 conferma (o attestazione) di ricevuta; avviso di ricevimento; riscontro: ( banca) acknowledgement slip, scontrino (di ricevuta)4 cenno di riconoscimento (fatto a q.); cenno di saluto: He nodded in acknowledgement, ha accennato un saluto col capo* * *[ək'nɒlɪdʒmənt] 1.1) (admission) (of fact, authority) riconoscimento m.; (of error, guilt) riconoscimento m., ammissione f.in acknowledgement of sth. — in segno di riconoscenza per qcs.; come riconoscimento di qcs
2) (confirmation of receipt) avviso m. di ricevimento3) (recognition of presence) cenno m. (di riconoscimento)2.nome plurale acknowledgements (in book etc.) ringraziamenti m. -
4 admit
[əd'mɪt] 1.1) (accept) ammettere, riconoscere [mistake, fact]to admit that — ammettere o riconoscere che
it is annoying, I (must, have to) admit — è fastidioso, devo ammetterlo
3) (allow to enter) ammettere [ person] ( into in, a)2."dogs not admitted" — "vietato l'ingresso ai cani"
admit of — form. ammettere
- admit to* * *[əd'mit]past tense, past participle - admitted; verb1) (to allow to enter: This ticket admits one person.) far entrare2) (to say that one accepts as true: He admitted (that) he was wrong.) ammettere, riconoscere•- admission
- admittance
- admittedly* * *[əd'mɪt] 1.1) (accept) ammettere, riconoscere [mistake, fact]to admit that — ammettere o riconoscere che
it is annoying, I (must, have to) admit — è fastidioso, devo ammetterlo
3) (allow to enter) ammettere [ person] ( into in, a)2."dogs not admitted" — "vietato l'ingresso ai cani"
admit of — form. ammettere
- admit to
См. также в других словарях:
admission of guilt — I noun avowal, concession, confession, confessional, contrition, culpability, disclosure, mea culpa, owning up, penance, penitence, remorse, repentance, sinfulness associated concepts: admissibility, coerced confession, traditional admissions II… … Law dictionary
admission of guilt — confession, acknowledgement of committing a crime or wrongdoing … English contemporary dictionary
admission — ad·mis·sion n 1: the act or process of admitting admission into evidence 2 a: a party s acknowledgment that a fact or statement is true ◇ In civil cases admissions are often agreed to and offered in writing to the court before trial as a method… … Law dictionary
admission — or admission to trading Admission to trading on the Exchange s markets for listed securities and admitted and traded shall be construed accordingly. For the avoidance of doubt this does not include when issued dealings . London Stock Exchange… … Financial and business terms
guilt — n [Old English gylt delinquency]: the fact of having committed an offense esp. against the law not enough evidence to establish guilt compare innocence Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 … Law dictionary
guilt — noun 1 feeling ADJECTIVE ▪ intense, overwhelming, terrible, tremendous ▪ lingering ▪ sexual ▪ Catholic … Collocations dictionary
admission — n. access 1) to apply for; gain; seek admission 2) to deny, refuse admission 3) free, open; restricted, selective admission; rolling (esp. AE) admissions 4) admission to (she applied for admission to the university) confession 5) to make an… … Combinatory dictionary
admission — noun 1 (C) a statement in which you admit that something is true or that you have done something wrong: admission that: The Senator s admission that he had lied to Congress shocked many Americans. | admission of guilt/failure/defeat etc: The… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
admission — ad|mis|sion W3 [ədˈmıʃən] n [Date: 1400 1500; : Latin; Origin: admissio, from admittere; ADMIT] 1.) a statement in which you admit that something is true or that you have done something wrong = ↑confession admission that ▪ The Senator s admission … Dictionary of contemporary English
admission — noun 1 entrance ADJECTIVE ▪ free, half price ▪ emergency ▪ emergency admissions to hospital ▪ cinema (BrE), theatre/theater … Collocations dictionary
guilt — noun (U) 1 a strong feeling of shame and sad ness because you have done something that you know is wrong (+ about/at): Don t you have any feelings of guilt about leaving David? | sense of guilt: He felt an enormous sense of guilt when he thought… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English