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unadmittedly

ad·mit
U u

Transcription

    • US Pronunciation
    • US IPA
    • [ad-mit]
    • /ædˈmɪt/
    • US Pronunciation
    • US IPA
    • [ad-mit]
    • /ædˈmɪt/

Definitions of unadmittedly word

  • verb with object unadmittedly to give right or means of entrance to: This ticket admits two people. 1
  • verb with object unadmittedly to permit to exercise a certain function or privilege: admitted to the bar. 1
  • verb with object unadmittedly to allow or concede as valid: to admit the force of an argument. 1
  • verb with object unadmittedly to acknowledge; confess: He admitted his guilt. 1
  • verb with object unadmittedly to grant in argument; concede: The fact is admitted. 1
  • verb with object unadmittedly to have capacity for: This passage admits two abreast. 1

Information block about the term

Origin of unadmittedly

First appearance:

before 1375
One of the 22% oldest English words
1375-1425; < Latin admittere, equivalent to ad- ad- + mittere to send, let go; replacing late Middle English amitte, with a- a-5 (instead of ad-) < Middle French amettre < Latin, as above

Historical Comparancy

Parts of speech for Unadmittedly

noun
adjective
verb
adverb
pronoun
preposition
conjunction
determiner
exclamation

unadmittedly popularity

A common word. It’s meaning is known to most children of preschool age. About 93% of English native speakers know the meaning and use the word.
Most Europeans know this English word. The frequency of it’s usage is somewhere between "mom" and "screwdriver".

unadmittedly usage trend in Literature

This diagram is provided by Google Ngram Viewer

See also

Matching words

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