0 to admit sth unpleasant -- medgi
to concede that they could have done better å innrømme at de kunne ha gjort bedre
2 to admit -- innrømme, vedgå, erkjenne
He conceded that he had been wrong.
3 to grant (eg a right). -- gjøre innrømmelser (overfor), gå med på
Now is the crucial moment; we may be unable to control the territory, but this must not be conceded.
Wage cutting in the early 1930s appeared to be almost as competitive as the sporadic wage increases conceded between 1917 and 1919.
In light of what we have conceded in the present section, we will not say that anymore.
Finally, the ambiguous powers conceded in the donations left large areas of doubt that were to make political advancement by the popes difficult.
Whilst the automation of this process remains only a distant possibility, it must be conceded that none of these techniques is directly usable as described.
They require conceding in advance a common empirical experience of the matters at hand.
The right of a woman to retain her maiden name in marriage was not conceded until 1976.
He conceded nothing to the rules when he saw nothing coming from them.