These examples are sourced from admittedly on Ludwig.guru.
"Admittedly, my love of dinosaurs is a little more intense than is typical." — The Guardian
"It would be a first at the Oscars, admittedly, but it's the only way to do justice to this most complex of issues." — The Guardian
"Which, of course, puts more pressure on parents to help their kids create firm foundations – and admittedly you can't always prevent your kids making mistakes." — The Guardian
"Bottles of the Old Vine's precious wine – which is admittedly undrinkable – have been presented to popes, presidents, emperors … and Brad Pitt." — The Guardian
"Admittedly it was years after I'd left school and, in hindsight, a poor fashion decision." — The Guardian
Examples sourced from https://ludwig.guru/s/admittedly
| Phrase | Context |
|---|---|
| it is true that | More explicit and formal; often used to start a paragraph before a 'but'. |
| to be fair | More informal and conversational; used to provide balance to a criticism. |
| granted | Highly concise; used at the start of a sentence to concede a point immediately. |
| albeit | Used to link a subordinate clause or adjective phrase, meaning "even though." |
| of course | Suggests the conceded point is obvious to everyone. |
| Expression | Function | Register | Typical Position |
|---|---|---|---|
| admittedly | Concession | Neutral / Formal | Initial, Medial, or Final |
The word admittedly is highly flexible and can appear in the sentence-initial position followed by a comma, mid-clause as a parenthetical insertion, or at the end of a statement. Regardless of its position, it usually requires punctuation like commas or dashes to separate it from the main clause.
While both express concession, granted is often used more strictly at the beginning of a thought to yield a point before pivoting with "but" or "however." Admittedly feels more like a personal acknowledgment or a comment on a specific adjective or fact within the flow of a sentence.
No, learners often mistakenly use admittedly as an intensifier for the verb "admitted," but it is actually a discourse marker. It should be used to introduce a concession that might challenge your argument, rather than to describe the act of someone confessing a crime or mistake.
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