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1 concede
kən'si:d1) (to admit: He conceded that he had been wrong.) innrømme, vedgå, erkjenne2) (to grant (eg a right).) gjøre innrømmelser (overfor), gå med påverb \/kənˈsiːd\/1) medgi, gå med på, innvilge, innrømme, erkjenne (riktigheten av)2) (golf, concede hole\/match) gi hull, gi match3) erkjenne tapet av, oppgi, avståconcede a point (in an argument) gjøre innrømmelser på ett punkt, vike på ett punkt (i en diskusjon)concede a game tape et game (i f.eks. tennis)concede a goal slippe inn et mål (i f.eks. fotball)concede defeat erkjenne at en er slått (eller beseiret)concede the election erkjenne motpartens valgseier
См. также в других словарях:
concede defeat — Colonel Morris vowed never to concede defeat Syn: capitulate, give in, give, surrender, yield, give up, submit, raise the white flag; back down, climb down; informal throw in the towel … Thesaurus of popular words
concede defeat — CAPITULATE, give in, surrender, yield, give up, submit, raise the white flag; back down, climb down, throw in the towel. → concede … Useful english dictionary
concede — verb 1 ADMIT STH IS TRUE (T) to admit that something is true or correct although you wish it was not true: You could be right I suppose , Sheila conceded. | concede (that): I concede that he s a good runner, but I still think I can beat him. 2… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
concede — [[t]kənsi͟ːd[/t]] ♦♦♦ concedes, conceding, conceded 1) VERB If you concede something, you admit, often unwillingly, that it is true or correct. [V that] Bess finally conceded that Nancy was right... [V with quote] Well, he conceded, I do… … English dictionary
concede */*/ — UK [kənˈsiːd] / US [kənˈsɪd] verb Word forms concede : present tense I/you/we/they concede he/she/it concedes present participle conceding past tense conceded past participle conceded 1) [transitive] to admit that something is true All right,… … English dictionary
concede — con|cede [ kən sid ] verb ** 1. ) transitive to admit that something is true: concede that: Myers was forced to concede that competition had badly affected profits. All right, Matt conceded, I probably made a mistake. 2. ) intransitive or… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
defeat — de|feat1 W3 [dıˈfi:t] n [U and C] 1.) failure to win or succeed ▪ She was a woman who hated to admit defeat . ▪ The Democratic Party candidate has already conceded defeat . defeat in ▪ The socialist party suffered a crushing defeat in the French… … Dictionary of contemporary English
concede — 01. He was finally obliged to [concede] that he was wrong when the results of the experiment were revealed. 02. She will never [concede] that I am right even if she knows it is true. 03. The government has granted tax [concessions] to new… … Grammatical examples in English
defeat */*/ — I UK [dɪˈfiːt] / US [dɪˈfɪt] noun [countable/uncountable] Word forms defeat : singular defeat plural defeats failure to win a competition or to succeed in doing something England suffered a 2–0 defeat by Scotland. a humiliating/heavy/crushing… … English dictionary
defeat — de|feat1 [ dı fit ] noun count or uncount ** failure to win a competition or succeed in doing something: Wisconsin suffered a 23 7 defeat by Illinois. admit/accept/concede defeat: a stubborn man who was not prepared to admit defeat a… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
concede — verb 1) I had to concede that I d overreacted Syn: admit, acknowledge, accept, allow, grant, recognize, own, confess; agree Ant: deny 2) he conceded the Auvergne to the king Syn … Thesaurus of popular words