concede

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
12
Words With Friends
15
Letters
7
Pronunciation
/kənˈsiːd/
See all 3 pronunciations
/kənˈsiːd/ · /kənˈsid/ · [kənˈsɪid]

Definition of concede

6 senses · 1 part of speech · etymology included

verb

  1. To yield or suffer; to surrender; to grant
    “I have to concede the argument.”
    “He conceded the race once it was clear he could not win.”
    “Kendall conceded defeat once she realized she could not win in a battle of wits.”
See all 6 definitions

verb

  1. To yield or suffer; to surrender; to grant
    “I have to concede the argument.”
    “He conceded the race once it was clear he could not win.”
    “Kendall conceded defeat once she realized she could not win in a battle of wits.”
  2. To grant, as a right or privilege; to make concession of.
  3. To admit or agree to be true; to acknowledge
    “Soda was added to an interval pregnant with legal stultifications, and the trooper continued to say nothing till he had taken a swig at his almost neat whisky. It fulfilled its function of humanizing him on the spot, though he refused to concede his astuteness to a mere gulp of liquor.”
    “On the other hand, she concedes that she has been able (in however limited a fashion) to take agentive actions to facilitate others’ socialization into and through Mandarin through programmatic activities she has contributed to. Thus, agency does not necessarily result in one’s own (sinophone or other) learning goals but may mediate others’ socialization, even when the facilitating or socializing agent is not herself an expert in the Chinese language.”
    “Transport Minister Baroness Vere has conceded that the Government does not yet know how its flagship £96 billion Integrated Rail Plan "will actually work on the ground".”
  4. To yield or make concession.
  5. To have a goal or point scored against
    “I don't know how they conceded that goal; their defense was so solid.”
    “The visitors arrived at the Reebok Stadium boasting an impressive record of winning their last eight Premier League games there without conceding a goal.”
  6. (of a bowler) to have runs scored off of one's bowling.

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

From Middle English [Term?], from Old French conceder, from Latin concēdō (“give way, yield”), from con- (“wholly”) + cēdō (“to yield, give way, to go, grant”), from Proto-Indo-European *ked- (“to go, yield”).

Anagrams of concede

1 play · some not in Scrabble

Hooks

3 extensions · 3 back

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