1 [C,U] admission (to sth) the act of allowing sb to enter a school, club, public place, etc 准许入学、加入会所、进入公共场所等:
Admissions to British universities have increased by 15% this year.今年英国大学录取的新生数目增加了15%。☞Look at entrance. 参看 entrance。
2 [U] the amount of money that you have to pay to enter a place 入场费;门票:
The museum charges half-price admission on Mondays.该博物馆每逢星期一收半费。
3 [C] a statement that admits that something is true 对某事属实的承认
admission/ədˋmIʃən; ədˈmIʃ$n/n 1 [C] when you admit that something is true or that you have done something wrong 承认﹔供认: +of If he resigns, it will be an admission of guilt. 如果他辞职﹐那就等于承认有错。2 [C,U] permission given to someone to enter a building or place, or to become a member of a school, club etc 准入﹔入学[入会]许可: +to Tom has applied for admission to Oxford next year. 汤姆已经申请明年入读牛津大学。3 [C,U] the process of taking someone into a hospital for treatment, tests, or care 收治﹐入院: There are 13,000 hospital admissions annually due to playground accidents. 每年有 13,000 人因游乐场上的事故而入院治疗。4 [U] the price charged when you go to a film, sports event, concert etc 入场费﹔门票: Admission $6.50 门票 6.50 美元
admissionadmissionadmissionsnoun1(no plural) allowing somebody to go into a school, club, public place, etc.: There is no admission to the park after 8 p.m.All those who were not wearing a tie were refused admission to the club.2(no plural) the amount of money that you have to pay to go into a place: Admission to the zoo is €10.3when you agree that you did something wrong or bad: an admission of guilt