Admissive
tending to .
Historical Examples
The tone was admissive, and as if she had said, “That is another thing!”
Real Folks Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney
I have been thus precise, because criticism is to me not “a game,” nor admissive of cogging and falsification.
Notes and Queries, Number 197, August 6, 1853 Various
Read Also:
- Admit
to allow to enter; grant or afford entrance to: to admit a student to college. to give right or means of entrance to: This ticket admits two people. to permit to exercise a certain function or privilege: admitted to the bar. to permit; allow. to allow or concede as valid: to admit the force of […]
- Admit of
to allow to enter; grant or afford entrance to: to admit a student to college. to give right or means of entrance to: This ticket admits two people. to permit to exercise a certain function or privilege: admitted to the bar. to permit; allow. to allow or concede as valid: to admit the force of […]
- Admittee
a person who has been or is going to be : Every admittee must present a ticket at the door.
- Admittable
to allow to enter; grant or afford entrance to: to admit a student to college. to give right or means of entrance to: This ticket admits two people. to permit to exercise a certain function or privilege: admitted to the bar. to permit; allow. to allow or concede as valid: to admit the force of […]
- Admittance
permission or right to enter: admittance into the exhibit room. an act of . actual entrance. Electricity. the measure of the ability of a circuit to conduct an alternating current, consisting of two components, conductance and susceptance; the reciprocal of impedance, expressed in mhos. Symbol: Y. Contemporary Examples But for me, this admittance of uncertainty […]