(n.) Permission to enter; the power or right of entrance; also, actual entrance; reception.
(n.) Concession; admission; allowance; as, the admittance of an argument.
(n.) Admissibility.
(n.) The act of giving possession of a copyhold estate.
Example Sentences:
(1) It was found that the increase of AMI patients admitted to our hospital was due to an increase in the hospitalization rate of AMI patients and the establishment of the coronary care unit (CCU) which allowed the admittance of patients who might have been declared dead out-of-hospital in the past.
(2) The dominating reason for admittance is heart disease.
(3) None of the patients was suspected of having abdominal typhus at the time of admittance.
(4) Measurements were made of the time course and amplitude of the change in real part of admittance, DeltaG, of a suspension of frog rod outer segments, following a flash of light bleaching about 1% of the rhodopsin content of the rods.
(5) After emergency admittance to hospital the ECG showed 3 degrees A-V block, requiring temporary pacemaker insertion.
(6) In our environment, there is a high percentage of admittances despite the fact that a positive outcome is reached in virtually all cases: only 1 exitus out of 103 cases.
(7) On admittance to the hospital, hyperpigmentation was also present.
(8) Six patients were in coma on admittance, 1 was confused, and 4 were conscious.
(9) They showed remarkable differences concerning the diagnosis of admittance, age and other factors related to the risk of infection.
(10) The blood samples were taken upon the patients admittance to the hospital and repeated every 6 hours until the 24th hour after admittance.
(11) The short term evolution suggests that the acute process can be prolonged for more than 1 month after hospital admittance, and the altered auditory function tends to persist over the mid term.
(12) Within this limit the spectral intensities of current and voltage noise are given by the frequency-dependent admittance, which in turn is closely linked to the relaxation-time spectrum of the transport system.
(13) Most of the respondents who do not gain admittance to medical school on reapplications still aspire to doctoral-level degrees, but only half remain in the health area.
(14) Patients were clinically examined before admittance to the study and at 1, 2, 3 and 6 months after treatment initiation (one capsule daily for a period of 10 days per month during 3 consecutive months).
(15) The results obtained from this investigation don't show significant differences between the suppressors and nonsuppressors based on any of the following variables: weight loss, age, duration of the illness, weight at admittance, percentage of ideal weight and cortisol and ACTH baseline levels.
(16) A computer corrected for the ear-canal volume utilizing measurements made at ear-canal pressures of 0 and --350 daPa and then converted the conductance and susceptance values into admittance and impedance units.
(17) The present study was undertaken for the purpose of studying the clinical validity of static admittance values in 42 confirmed otosclerotic ears.
(18) Observation of the conductance component of admittance consistently required higher intensity levels to elicit the acoustic reflex.
(19) An admittance function was defined as the percentage of the rays reaching the rhabdom with respect to those entering the ommatidium.
(20) We’ll continue to make our views on these issues known to leaders in Washington and elsewhere.” As well as halting Syrian arrivals indefinitely, the president’s order suspends the admittance of all refugees to the US for 120 days.
Entree
Definition:
(n.) A coming in, or entrance; hence, freedom of access; permission or right to enter; as, to have the entree of a house.
(n.) In French usage, a dish served at the beginning of dinner to give zest to the appetite; in English usage, a side dish, served with a joint, or between the courses, as a cutlet, scalloped oysters, etc.
Example Sentences:
(1) The stapes is assigned the highest rating (2 points), while all other entrees on the scale are 1 point.
(2) His entree to the Conservative high command came through work and social contacts.
(3) Taste was the primary reason given by patrons for their entree choice, regardless of whether or not it was labeled.
(4) Because entrees contribute substantially to total meal fat content, we evaluated a cafeteria-based intervention for increasing the purchase rate of low-fat entrees (M = 6.83 g) relative to nonlow-fat entrees (M = 25.59 g).
(5) The three lowest calorie food selections within three food categories (i.e., salads, vegetables, entrees) were identified by labels.
(6) Entrees are sweet potato and coconut soup and for dessert there’s a triple chocolate torte with salted caramel burnt fig, vincotto spheres and espresso creamacotta.
(7) He used his celebrity status, his entree to the BBC and his connections with other stars as bait with which to draw young girls into his sphere.” In addition to unnamed supervisors and technical staff who worked on shows like Top of the Pops, Smith lists other examples of people who knew or suspected Savile was behaving inappropriately or illegally.
(8) Eating food from the first-class menu was associated with illness (p = 0.09), and eating a tourist-class entree was protective (p less than 0.01).
(9) A bacteriological survey of meat pies, frozen prepared dinners and entrees indicated that their bacterial populations were related to the components, the environment and handling in manufacture.
(10) Research in production times of vegetarian entrees provides a basis for comparison of production times of menu items for cost analysis.
(11) Category 4 contains foods high in Na and low in K relative to high energy: bread, rice, luncheon meats, commercial cookies and pastries, and fast food entrees.
(12) The NRA’s entree to the Koch world stems in part from bonds that the gun group’s top officials have forged.
(13) It was his move to Los Angeles, where he became bureau chief, which gave him his entree to war reporting.
(14) After the Wuss Island revelations we dine on medium rare steak (perfect) and kingfish with pigfish as the entree.
(15) On-site preparation was limited to rethermalization of frozen entrees and portioning of bulk-delivered items.
(16) Four Regional Health Protection Branch laboratories each compared aerobic colony counts obtained after "stomaching" and blending, for a minimum of 10 samples in each of the seven food groups: dry pastas; chocolate and cocoa powders; frozen entrees (macaroni and cheese, chow mein, chop suey, fried rice, seafood casseroles, and Salisbury steak); nonfat dry milk; shrimp and crabmeats; spices; and breakfast sausages.
(17) The intervention, which cost $80.00, produced significant increases (i.e., from 20% to 35%) in the purchase rate of LF entrees.
(18) Neither device could be said to offer an entree to instant liver surgery.
(19) Not one to miss an opportunity, Abbott cut in right after the soft entree: "And we don't want to give rise to a whole lot of mischief-making.
(20) "I often think how lucky I am to have them as owners; a magazine like ours could be easily run as an entree into society," he says.