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Concede   /kənsˈid/   Listen
Concede

verb
(past & past part. conceded; pres. part. conceding)
1.
Admit (to a wrongdoing).  Synonyms: confess, profess.
2.
Be willing to concede.  Synonyms: grant, yield.
3.
Give over; surrender or relinquish to the physical control of another.  Synonyms: cede, grant, yield.
4.
Acknowledge defeat.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Concede" Quotes from Famous Books



... war for them, damn 'em, in a single battle, and single-handed. Lord North knew it. The Rockingham Whigs, with Burke as their leader, knew it and were ready to concede independence, having been convinced that conciliation was no longer practicable or possible. Richmond urged the impossibility of final conquest, and even Gibbon agreed that the American colonies had been lost. I accomplished all that, I tell you, and ...
— The Loyalist - A Story of the American Revolution • James Francis Barrett

... first only as an inquirer. He was not then ready to be a disciple. "Rabbi, we know that thou art a teacher come from God," was all he could say that first night. He did not concede Jesus' Messiahship. He knew him then only by what he had heard of his miracles. He was not ready yet to declare that the son of the carpenter was the Christ, the Son of God. When we remember the common Jewish ...
— Personal Friendships of Jesus • J. R. Miller

... also, as the Trades Unions cannot do, upon a high standard of craftsmanship, which still astonishes the world in the corners of perishing buildings or the colours of broken glass. There is no artist or art critic who will not concede, however distant his own style from the Gothic school, that there was in this time a nameless but universal artistic touch in the moulding of the very tools of life. Accident has preserved the rudest sticks and stools and pots and pans which ...
— A Short History of England • G. K. Chesterton

... continued the Doctor; "I say I was alone; let me demonstrate my proposition. Blackstone says, and what he says every lawyer will concede is the end of the law, and the beginning too, for that matter, that when a woman becomes a wife, she loses her identity, becomes nobody; that her husband absorbs her existence, as it were, as he does her goods and chattels, in his own. Now, sir, ...
— Wild Northern Scenes - Sporting Adventures with the Rifle and the Rod • S. H. Hammond

... therefore make amends for their possible defection by drawing largely on the Conservative strength. The great danger was, that, while conciliating the Conservatives by a show of concession, he should alienate his own party by seeming to concede too much. Now, that the effect which he aimed to produce excluded all declamation, all attempt at eloquence, anything like flights of oratory or striking figures of rhetoric, nobody understood better ...
— Atlantic Monthly, Vol. 8, No. 50, December, 1861 • Various


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