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Admissive

   Also found in: Medical, Legal, Wikipedia 0.04 sec.
ad·mis·sion  (d-mshn)
n.
1.
a. The act of admitting or allowing to enter.
b. The state of being allowed to enter.
2. Right to enter; access.
3. The price required or paid for entering; an entrance fee.
4. A confession, as of having committed a crime.
5. A voluntary acknowledgment of truth.
6. A fact or statement granted or admitted; a concession.

[Middle English, from Latin admissi, admissin-, from admissus, past participle of admittere, to admit; see admit.]

ad·missive (-msv) adj.
Usage Note: It is often maintained that admittance should be used only to refer to achieving physical access to a place (He was denied admittance to the courtroom), and that admission should be used for the wider sense of achieving entry to a group or institution (her admission to the club; China's admission to the United Nations). There is no harm in observing this distinction, though it is often ignored. But admission is much more common in the sense "a fee paid for the right of entry": The admission to the movie was five dollars.
ThesaurusLegend:  Synonyms Related Words Antonyms
Adj.1.admissive - characterized by or allowing admission; "an Elizabethan tragedy admissive of comic scenes"
receptive, open - ready or willing to receive favorably; "receptive to the proposals"


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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
"The plague broke the deadlock, and allowed Europeans to rebuild their demographic and economic systems in ways more admissive of further development" (81).
"The plague broke the deadlock, and allowed Europeans to rebuild their demographic and economic systems in ways more admissive of further development" (81).
"The plague broke the deadlock, and allowed Europeans to rebuild their demographic and economic systems in ways more admissive of further development" (81).
 
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