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1 admission
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2 admission
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3 admission
* * *ad.mis.sion[ədm'iʃən] n 1 admissão, aceitação. 2 acesso, ingresso, entrada. the admission costs five dollars / o ingresso custa cinco dólares. 3 preço de ingresso. 4 acolhimento. 5 consentimento. 6 nomeação para um cargo. 7 confissão, revelação. 8 reconhecimento. admission to the bar licença de praticar a advocacia. -
4 admission
admissão, entradaEnglish-Portuguese dictionary of military terminology > admission
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5 admission
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6 admission
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7 admission to the bar
admission to the barlicença de praticar a advocacia. -
8 admission valve
admission valveválvula de admissão. -
9 admission to listing
• admission à la cote• cotation -
10 admission board
instance d'admission -
11 admission chamber
ad.mis.sion cham.ber[ədm'iʃən tʃeimbə] n Tech câmara de acesso (máquina a vapor). -
12 admission free
ad.mis.sion free[ədm'iʃən fri:] n entrada gratuita. -
13 admission ticket
ad.mis.sion ti.cket[ədm'iʃən tikit] n bilhete de ingresso. -
14 admission to stock exchange dealing
introduction en bourseInvestor's Forget-me-Nots Dictionary > admission to stock exchange dealing
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15 admission rate
• regime de admissão• taxa de admissãoEnglish-Portuguese dictionary of military terminology > admission rate
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16 office for admission of securities to listing
instance d'admissionInvestor's Forget-me-Nots Dictionary > office for admission of securities to listing
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17 office for admission of securities to quotation
instance d'admissionInvestor's Forget-me-Nots Dictionary > office for admission of securities to quotation
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18 non-admission
non-ad.mis.sion[nɔn ədm'iʃən] n recusa de admissão. -
19 franchise
[fʀɑ̃̃ʃiz]Nom féminin (honnêteté) franqueza feminino(d'assurance, de location automobile) franquia feminino* * *franchise fʀɑ̃ʃiz]nome femininoen toute franchisecom toda a franquezafranchise postaleporte-pagoadmission en franchiseisenção legal do pagamento de impostos -
20 admit
[əd'mit]past tense, past participle - admitted; verb1) (to allow to enter: This ticket admits one person.) admitir2) (to say that one accepts as true: He admitted (that) he was wrong.) reconhecer•- admission
- admittance
- admittedly* * *ad.mit[ədm'it] vt+vi 1 admitir: a) aceitar, permitir, consentir, acolher. to admit into one’s confidence / fazer alguém seu confidente. b) reconhecer (a verdade), confessar, revelar. he admited being guilty / ele admitiu ser culpado. 2 conceder o direito (de passagem, entrada, uso). this ticket admits two / este bilhete vale para duas pessoas. 3 tolerar. 4 comportar, necessitar. 5 acomodar. to admit of a doubt dar margem a dúvidas. to admit to bar autorizar a prática da advocacia.
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См. также в других словарях:
admission — [ admisjɔ̃ ] n. f. • 1539; lat. admissio 1 ♦ Action d admettre (qqn), fait d être admis. J ai envoyé au président du club ma demande d admission. Admission dans une école, à un examen. Admission sur concours. 2 ♦ (XVIII e) Action d admettre en… … Encyclopédie Universelle
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
ADMISSION — ADMISSION, legal concept applying both to debts and facts. Formal admission by a defendant is regarded as equal to the evidence of a hundred witnesses (BM 3b). This admission had to be a formal one, before duly appointed witnesses, or before the… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
Admission — Ad*mis sion, n. [L. admissio: cf. F. admission. See {Admit}.] 1. The act or practice of admitting. [1913 Webster] 2. Power or permission to enter; admittance; entrance; access; power to approach. [1913 Webster] What numbers groan for sad… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
admission — admission, admittance Like many doublets, these two words have competed with each other for several centuries (admission first recorded in Middle English, admittance in 1589) without ever establishing totally separate roles. In the meaning… … Modern English usage
admission — temporaire. Admission of goods into country duty free for processing and eventual export. Bail. The order of a competent court or magistrate that a person accused of crime be discharged from actual custody upon the taking of bail. Evidence.… … Black's law dictionary
admission — temporaire. Admission of goods into country duty free for processing and eventual export. Bail. The order of a competent court or magistrate that a person accused of crime be discharged from actual custody upon the taking of bail. Evidence.… … Black's law dictionary
Admission — may refer to several things:In general usage* *Allowance into a theater, movie theater, music venue, or other event locale, especially when purchased with a ticketIn education*University and college admissionsIn law*Admission (law), a statement… … Wikipedia
admission — ADMISSION. sub. fém. Action par laquelle on est admis. Depuis son admission aux Ordres sacrés, il a toujours vécu en bon Ecclésiastique … Dictionnaire de l'Académie Française 1798
admission — (n.) early 15c., acceptance, reception, approval, from L. admissionem (nom. admissio) a letting in, noun of action from pp. stem of admittere (see ADMIT (Cf. admit)). Meaning an acknowledging is from 1530s. Sense of a literal act of letting in is … Etymology dictionary