Admit
in sentence
1892 examples of Admit in a sentence
So in that example, OK, there are a few extra steps, I
admit.
Who will
admit
in public to having a Blackberry?
I will
admit
that I did not expect to encounter a fourth use case.
MK: Yeah, you know, legislation is often at a colossally slow pace, but my wife, and I have to admit, a lot of other members of Congress that I know, work incredibly hard.
There have been some cases, I admit, where I as a designer did feel the influence of technology.
I'll admit, I love my smart vacuum, but many other things in the house drove me insane: we ran out of electrical outlets, and I had to download over a dozen apps to my phone to control everything.
I mean, even if you're cavalier about privacy, I hope that you would
admit
that's a step too far.
And I have to admit, at the beginning, they're really cute and warm and snugly.
By the way, I must admit, my English is not so good, I didn't know what is scrotal; I understand it's a scrotum.
I
admit
the sight of the leash would excite me, but only because it meant I was about to smell things you had never touched.
In six months, we'll have finished three years of testing the makerspace kiosk, which I have to admit, we've subjected to some pretty horrific abuse.
—Clifford Stoll, Newsweek, 1995] You must
admit
that gives you, at least it gives me pleasure when somebody says how dead wrong you are.
We plutocrats know, even if we don't like to
admit
it in public, that if we had been born somewhere else, not here in the United States, we might very well be just some dude standing barefoot by the side of a dirt road selling fruit.
But, we also must
admit
that we haven't been good at using those same networks and technologies to successfully articulate an alternative to what we're seeing and find the consensus and build the alliances that are needed to make it happen.
And looking back, I still stand by all the things I've been saying for years about the importance of goals and determination and self-belief, but I'll also
admit
that I hadn't given much thought to what happens when you reach the all-consuming goal that you've dedicated most of your adult life to, and the reality is that I'm still figuring that bit out.
I hate to
admit
it, but this wasn't even close to my worst landing.
The way I think of it is, we can't learn to see until we
admit
we're blind.
And as the 30 seconds we waited two and a half hours for comes to a close we gather up our things, and I lock eyes with the clerk again; and she gives me an apologetic smile and mouths, "I am so sorry!" (Laughter) And her humanity, her willingness to
admit
her mistake disarms me immediately, then I give her a: "It's okay, it happens.
People would
admit
shameful secrets about themselves, and other people would say, "Oh my God, I'm exactly the same."
And I think back on the early days of Twitter, when people would
admit
shameful secrets about themselves, and other people would say, "Oh my God, I'm exactly the same."
It wasn't a formal, organized learning process, and I'm happy to
admit
that.
The moment you
admit
to loving someone, you
admit
to having a lot to lose, and it's true that these questions do provide a mechanism for getting to know someone quickly, which is also a mechanism for being known, and I think this is the thing that most of us really want from love: to be known, to be seen, to be understood.
And I have to admit, I still have piles of mail that haven't been sorted, and piles of emails that I haven't gone through.
And because they didn't want to
admit
that for five years they were implementing a catastrophic program in Greece.
We need to just
admit
that they are really only open for people who fit neatly into one of two gender boxes, which I do not.
Much earlier, in his defense of the poet Archias, Roman consul Cicero appealed to his own practical wisdom and expertise as a politician: "Drawn from my study of the liberal sciences and from that careful training to which I
admit
that at no part of my life I have ever been disinclined."
Now, when I heard that term, I have to admit, it tripped me up.
Through an international convention signed by 147 governments, the 1951 Convention on the Status of Refugees, and an international organization, UNHCR, states committed to reciprocally
admit
people onto their territory who flee conflict and persecution.
The resulting internal conflict, known as cognitive dissonance, keeps you trapped, as each compromise makes it more painful to
admit
you've been deceived.
People usually do
admit
their deficits once they can spot them.
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