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单词 admission
释义
admissionad‧mis‧sion /ədˈmɪʃən/ ●●○ W3 noun Word Origin
WORD ORIGINadmission
Origin:
1400-1500 Latin admissio, from admittere; ADMIT
Examples
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER DICTIONARIES
  • Admission is only $3.50.
  • No admission after 10 p.m.
  • The court may assume that your silence is an admission of guilt.
  • You only married him for his money? What an admission!
EXAMPLES FROM THE CORPUS
  • By his own admission, he was naive.
  • Fewer than one in five of the schools answering the survey said they have no academic admissions criteria for new students.
  • Merrill worries aloud about the consequences to Barnard and Columbia if need-blind admissions were discontinued.
  • Similar changes have already begun in the admissions process for undergraduate students entering in 1998.
  • The admission charge is 20p and all the proceeds will go to the Northern Ireland Hospice.
  • We did not include in the analysis admissions to hospital on the day of enrolment.
  • When interviewed by complaints department officers he made similar allegations about fabrication of admissions.
Thesaurus
Longman Language Activatora statement admitting that you have done something wrong
an official statement that someone makes to the police, admitting that they have done something illegal and explaining what happened: · Sergeant Thompson wrote down Smith's confession and asked him to sign it.make a confession: · In a confession made to police shortly after his arrest, Davis said he had killed the victim with a kitchen knife. full confession: · By making a full confession, Reeves hoped he would be more kindly treated by the authorities.
when you admit that you were wrong or that you have done something bad or illegal: admission (that): · The Senator's admission that he had lied to Congress shocked many Americans.What an admission (to make)!: · You only married him for his money? What an admission!admission of guilt (=when you admit that you are guilty): · The court may assume that your silence is an admission of guilt.
to enter a place
· It was getting cold, so we went in.· There was a man at the door trying to stop people from going in.· Don't go in my room - it's a mess.go into something · Make sure you wipe your feet before you go into the house.
if someone comes in , they enter a room or building that you are in: · That must be Nina coming in right now.· As soon as Adrian came in, everyone stopped talking.· Why don't you come in the house for a little while and get warmed up.come into something: · When you first come into the building, you'll see the elevators just across the lobby.
formal to go or come into a room, building, or area: · You need a ticket to enter.· The army entered the city from the north.· As soon as he entered the room, he knew there was something wrong.
to succeed in entering a place, especially when this is difficult or takes a long time: · We queued in the rain for two hours and still didn't get in.· You usually have to wait a while before you can get in the club.get into something: · You shouldn't have any trouble getting into the concert - they've only sold half the tickets.
formal to succeed in entering a place or being allowed to enter, especially when this is difficult or takes a long time: · Brown gained admission by claiming to be a newspaper photographer.gain admission to: · We had to talk to several guards to gain admission to the courtyard.
to suddenly and noisily enter a room: · Two men with guns burst in and told us to lie on the floor.burst in on: · I ran back to Iris's and burst in on Polly who was ironing in the kitchen.burst into something: · Lotty burst into the room waving a letter in the air.
to suddenly enter a room where you are not wanted, for example because you are interrupting someone: · I was studying when Ben suddenly barged in.barge in on: · It's impossible to concentrate when people keep barging in on you.barge into something: · Some of the strikers came barging into the meeting and demanded to speak with the directors.
to enter somewhere in a way that makes the people who are already there notice you: · I waited until everybody was sitting quietly before making my entrance.make a grand entrance: · She walked slowly down the staircase, making a grand entrance.
to enter a place confidently and calmly, especially when other people would be a little nervous or embarrassed to enter: · Katie breezes in at eleven o'clock each morning, two hours late.breeze into something: · Giles just breezed into the office, used the phone, and then breezed out again.
Collocations
COLLOCATIONS FROM THE ENTRY
 Silence is often interpreted as an admission of guilt.
 Reese, by his own admission, lacks the necessary experience.
 The young men tried to enter a nightclub but were refused admission.
 Women gained admission to the club only recently.
 The college has a very selective admissions policy. the admissions officer
 There are 13,000 hospital admissions annually due to playground accidents.
 The cost includes free admission to the casinos.
 The Museum has no admission charge.
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
(=for being allowed to enter a place)· There is no admission charge.
· Dropping out of college would be an admission of failure.
COLLOCATIONS FROM THE CORPUSADJECTIVE
· Referral for compulsory admission is clearly an issue of power.· Where compulsory admission was necessary, three types of admission orders were defined.· Although considered in need of assessment or treatment, these women did not require compulsory admission, with the attendant limits on civil liberties.· New Mental Health Tribunals were set up in each health region to deal with any complaints arising from compulsory admission procedures.· Third, the move towards compulsory admissions to residential care should be discouraged in favour of voluntary and planned admissions.· However, many were referred for compulsory admission where they were subsequently not admitted, or admitted informally.· The father, so angered by the compulsory admission, became threatening and abusive to residential staff.· First, ASWs took responsibility for decisions diverting individuals from compulsory admission.
· Most charging sites and museums offer teachers free admission for a preview visit.· All participants will receive free admission to the museum today, following a post-race breakfast and awards ceremony.· Tickets are $ 12 at the door, with free admission for children under age 12.· Tuition was free, and admission was open to anyone who qualified.· Tickets are $ 5. 50, with free admission to children under age 16.· And, unlike local venues that charge admission and parking fees, the Miramar air show offers free admission and free parking.· The second Tuesday of every month offers free admission. 4700 Western Heritage Way.
· Furthermore, psychiatry has been affected by the general reduction in admission beds.· Michaels. General admission, $ 5; members, $ 3. 410-745-2916.· Tickets, available at the box office, are $ 10 general admission, $ 7 for students and seniors.· Tickets are $ 10 general admission, $ 8 for seniors and $ 5 for children under 5.· Tickets are $ 12 general admission, $ 5 students.· Tickets are $ 50 general admission, $ 20 for students and $ 10 for seniors.
· Analysts say this trend is even more remarkable because public universities run open admission policies and do not charge tuition.· By the logic of open admissions, the failure of the students implied a failure of the institution.· City College was a radical and controversial experiment long before the advent of open admissions.· Sabour was the kind of student in whose name the open admissions struggle had been waged.· The open admissions institutions would dedicate themselves to improving the conditions of the public schools from which they drew.· The open admissions plan was to be implemented in the fall of 1970, a year from the time it was conceived.· Her work, and her person, came to symbolize the moral and intellectual principles on which the open admissions experiment rested.· Errors and Expectations was probably the most influential work of pedagogy to emerge from the world of open admissions.
· It implies a tacit admission of equality which can be almost priceless.· His enemies imply that his resignation is a tacit admission of guilt.
NOUN
· Opening times and admission charges have not yet been published.· The only admission charge is their time.· Our admission charge rations us to one programme.· Dinner and dance lessons, no admission charge.· The admission charge is 20p and all the proceeds will go to the Northern Ireland Hospice.· The exhibition is free, but there is an admission charge to the Castle.· The new season will also bring admission charge to Museum of Flight, £2 for adults and £1 children and concessions.· There will also be a tea-room and a small admission charge.
· The Bakke decision permitted the use of race or national origin as a factor in college admissions.· To be sure, dressing up the college admissions application often motivates the teen charity work, but so what?· The students might not have done well enough to preserve the 80 average that guaranteed senior college admission.· But the briefest conversation with Shahi Smart reveals some one college admissions officers might well duel over.· Raise college admissions standards so that young people have an incentive to work harder and achieve more in high school.· They are working on performance-based standards for college admission.· Counselors say the program has pushed some success-driven students, egged on by their parents, to prepare earlier for college admissions.· Even some college admissions officials worry that it is too much, too soon.
· It is also examining both the admissions criteria and the examination results of the Vocational Course.· Fewer than one in five of the schools answering the survey said they have no academic admissions criteria for new students.· Their applications were refused on the grounds that they did not meet the admission criteria.· It also is important to note that admissions criteria differ from program to program, with some more stringent than others.· Although a normal ultrasonagraphy was not one of the original admission criteria, it became one in 1982-83.
· Only once, and I had to pay an admission fee.· Precipitating the shouting match at Lindale was a 25-cent increase in the $ 1 admission fee.· No admission fee is charged but donations given by visitors amount to £180.· The income from admission fees helps the monks finance a lifestyle that might otherwise be impossible in the modern world.· Visitors please note no admission fees is required for entry to the gift shop alone, which is open all year round.· All levy a nominal admission fee.· It also includes dozens of sights that have admission fees.· But once in the park, she could not afford the separate admission fees for the parks within the park.
· Counselling and psychotherapy Psychotherapy commences during hospital admission and continues long after discharge.· For example hospital admission rates for men and women aged 75 + increased by at least 60 percent during the decade.· However, hospital admissions for asthma attacks, mostly among children, doubled during the 1980s.· She had a history of hospital admissions for similar symptoms in 1976, 1983, and 1989 which resolved spontaneously.· Clinical details, dates of hospital admissions, and contacts with other patients at outpatient clinics were also recorded.· It will be important to know whether the trend in nocturnal hospital admissions has changed since the new contract was introduced.· The primary outcome was the occurrence of severe clinical events, defined as death or hospital admission irrespective of the cause.· Toxic liver injury: hospital admissions 1992-93.
· But the briefest conversation with Shahi Smart reveals some one college admissions officers might well duel over.· Reyes tells the story, now with a smirk, of constant batterings by admissions officers because of the standardized tests.
· Likewise, in a church school, priorities such as those stated in the admissions policy here can properly be applied.· Unlike City College, very few of these public institutions practiced selective admissions policies.· Segregative in both appearance and admission policies, they catered mostly for elderly disabled people.· The intent is to steer these students toward enrollment despite the regents' desire for a color-blind admissions policy.· Analysts say this trend is even more remarkable because public universities run open admission policies and do not charge tuition.· The move came after a vote by regents indefinitely tabling a motion to rescind their July 20 vote revising admissions policies.· In general, it was for the governors to determine the admissions policy at the school after consultation with the local education authority.· The black presence on campuses with selective admissions policies such as City was thus minute.
· In January the firm said that, to lure visitors during winter, it would cut its admission prices for locals.· Present this voucher to admit up to 6 people at the discounted admission prices above, any opening day in 1992.· Lower admission prices and the opening of Space Mountain were cited as helping to make the difference.· The admission price includes rides on the steam trains and the other attractions.· I looked for signs telling me where to park and what the admission price might be.· This has proved so popular that arrangements have been made for this to be included in the admission price to the Centre.· Ember was only my admission price.
· New Mental Health Tribunals were set up in each health region to deal with any complaints arising from compulsory admission procedures.· Admission Details of the BMus admission procedure and of University and faculty entry requirements may be found in the Admissions section.· This study showed that the anticipation and the worry had as much effect as the actual admission procedure.
· Similar changes have already begun in the admissions process for undergraduate students entering in 1998.· It shines a necessary light on the admissions process at colleges and universities.
· There is a marked gender difference in first admission rates; the rates for women being approximately one-third higher than for males.· Disease was measured by first hospital admission rates since endometriosis can be diagnosed with accuracy only at laparotomy or laparoscopy.· For example hospital admission rates for men and women aged 75 + increased by at least 60 percent during the decade.· Certain immigrant communities have been documented for many years as having higher mental hospital admission rates.· Data on admission to hospital is not comprehensive but they suggest that admission rates rise with declining social class.
· Some aspects of shared planning are valuable enough to survive regardless of the competition for school admissions.
· Another advantage is that they have fairly flexible admissions standards.· To lower admission standards would be, in effect, to devalue the currency in which their diploma had been issued.· Develop performance-based admissions standards in addition to, or in place of, more traditional entrance requirements.· Raise college admissions standards so that young people have an incentive to work harder and achieve more in high school.· Though individual programs do have some admissions standards, they are typically modest.· Another response has been to dig deeper than usual into waiting lists or to lower admissions standards.
· The data for university admissions in 1992 is the earliest available to us with the necessary detail.· The pupil also takes to the prospective employer or the university admissions tutor the raw scores of exam results.· She now works in the university admissions office.
VERB
· An applicant may apply for admission from 1 January, 1 April, 1 July or 1 October in any year.· Parents generally have a two-month period in which to apply for admission.· At the end of your training contract you may apply for admission as a solicitor.· Oh completing her travels, she applied for admission to the Benedictine convent at Cingoli.
· Residential institutions were doubly punished: admission to care was bad enough, but admission to residential care was even worse.· Hospitals have to provide costings for those procedures, admissions, and care not included in the fundholding scheme.· Will admission to care management be the only way to access social services' resources?· Preventive action beyond the point of a child's admission to care is seen as a fourth level of prevention.· Several demographic variables are associated with admission to care.· Interventions exclusively directed towards families whose children are in imminent danger of admission to care. 2.
· He denied making a verbal admission concerning any transaction between himself and any women.· Many students who were denied admission, said Mr Salemi, turned to economics as an alternative.
· This is followed closely by discounted admission to racecourses and greyhound tracks.· This will help you to work in any type of authority following your admission as a solicitor.· Mr Portillo's decision, which follows his admission last year to homosexual experiences as a young man, surprised Conservative headquarters.
· Eventually he gained admission to the company and became a director and sometime governor.· She went to public high school and did well enough to gain admission to Northwestern.· Hall later returned to the club where Mr Healy was also trying to gain admission.· Competition for entry to these programs is keen, and applicants need above-average grades to gain admission.· In 1916 Pierre Nizan's efforts to gain full admission to the bourgeoisie were finally dashed.· Two years later he gained admission to Maharaja's College, Mysore, where he wrote his first short stories.
· We did not include in the analysis admissions to hospital on the day of enrolment.· This has proved so popular that arrangements have been made for this to be included in the admission price to the Centre.· USAir Vacations has two-night packages beginning at $ 434 a person and also include free admission to various attractions.· The show is included with regular admission to the park.
· When the man was interviewed he made a full admission.· Quahanti made no admission of guilt, and the case was continued for the duration of her probation.· Agriculture minister Nick Brown made this admission in a letter to shadow farm minister Tim Yeo.· The ad includes video of Clinton speaking at a Houston fund-raiser, where he made the admission about the taxes.· B made admissions, and he was interviewed further.· He denied making a verbal admission concerning any transaction between himself and any women.· But after making this admission we must go deeper into the question.· Will my hon. Friend call on the hon. Member for Livingston to make a similar admission of the error of his ways?
· Only once, and I had to pay an admission fee.· He had seats for forty thousand, who paid a minimum admission of twenty-five cents but more for reserved space.· If more, then the consumer will be willing to pay for the admission ticket.· I feared enormous crowds at Chawton paying hefty admission fees to file past animated wax figures.
· Very few colleges these days refuse admission on grounds of age alone.· The advocacy system gives the child the right to voluntarily admit himself or refuse admission.· They were refused admission to a public school attended by white children solely because of their race....· If the hospital refuses admission, the ambulance takes the case to Nirmal Hriday.
· If this can not be assured, then the person may require admission to a psychiatric unit.· Although considered in need of assessment or treatment, these women did not require compulsory admission, with the attendant limits on civil liberties.· Occasionally, a patient requires repeated crisis admissions.· Even patients who eventually recover may take years to do so, and they sometimes require several admissions.· Methods Patients with active Crohn's disease requiring hospital admission were considered for entry into the study.
· She had been advised by her doctor to seek admission to hospital in the event of a severe attack.
Phrases
PHRASES FROM THE ENTRY
  • the college's admissions policy
  • They want to limit admissions to 500 students a year.
1[countable] a statement in which you admit that something is true or that you have done something wrong SYN  confessionadmission that The Senator’s admission that he had lied to Congress shocked many Americans.admission of guilt/defeat/failure etc Silence is often interpreted as an admission of guilt. Reese, by his own admission, lacks the necessary experience.2[uncountable] permission given to someone to enter a building or place, or to become a member of a school, club etc:  No admission after 10 pm. The young men tried to enter a nightclub but were refused admission. Women gained admission to the club only recently.admission to those applying for admission to university3admissions [plural] the process of allowing people to enter a university, institution etc, or the number of people who can enteruniversity/college/school admissionsadmissions policy/procedures etc The college has a very selective admissions policy. the admissions officer4[countable, uncountable] the process of taking someone into a hospital for treatment, tests, or care:  There are 13,000 hospital admissions annually due to playground accidents.5[uncountable] the cost of entrance to a concert, sports event, cinema etcadmittance:  Admission: $10 for adults, $5 for children. The cost includes free admission to the casinos. The Museum has no admission charge.
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