Concede
31concede — v. 1) (B) he finally conceded the election to his opponent 2) (L; to ) she conceded (to us) that she had been mistaken * * * [kən siːd] (B) he finally conceded the election to his opponent (L; to ) she conceded (to us) that she had been mistaken …
32concede — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. t. consent, yield, give in, allow; accede; grant, admit, acknowledge, confess; cede, give up, surrender. See relinquishment, disclosure, giving, permission, compromise. II (Roget s IV) v. Syn. yield,… …
33concede — con·cede || kÉ™n siËd v. admit; yield, give up …
34concede — verb 1》 finally admit that something is true. ↘admit (defeat) in a match or contest. 2》 surrender or yield (a possession, advantage, or right). ↘fail to prevent an opponent scoring (a goal or point). Derivatives conceder noun Origin C15:… …
35concede — v. a. 1. Surrender, yield, grant, give up. 2. Allow, admit, grant …
36concede — v 1. acknowledge, recognize; admit, allow; yield, accede, agree, acquiesce, assent, accept, own, defer to, abide by, be persuaded, come over, come round. 2. deliver, grant, transfer, give, vouchsafe, bequeath, hand over, donate, tender, release,… …
37concede — con·cede …
38concede — [c]/kənˈsid / (say kuhn seed) verb (conceded, conceding) –verb (t) 1. to admit as true, just, or proper; admit. 2. to grant as a right or privilege; yield. –verb (i) 3. to make concession; yield; admit. 4. to admit defeat in an election. {Latin… …
39concede — v.t. admit, acknowledge; allow, grant; surrender; Sport, allow opponent to score; v.i. admit defeat. ♦ conceder, n …
40concede — /konseySow/ Sp. A term used in conveyances under Mexican law, equivalent to the English word grant …