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Discover LudwigThe phrase "admitted to building" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when acknowledging or confessing involvement in the act of constructing something, whether literally or metaphorically.
Example: "After much deliberation, he finally admitted to building the unauthorized structure in the park."
Alternatives: "acknowledged constructing" or "confessed to creating".
Exact(5)
Still, Mr. Tang has admitted to building a vast, unlicensed basement.
One, Henry Tang, has admitted to building a vast, unlicensed basement that reportedly was to contain a wine cellar, a movie theater and a Japanese-style bath.
"He admitted to building the explosive device, planting it and detonating it," said Cataldo Motta, the prosecutor coordinating the investigation, which involves about 100 police and military officers.
The C.I.A. has said that North Korea already has one or two nuclear weapons, and this summer the North has admitted to building some.
Rosenfeld also admitted to building smaller bombs and conducting test detonations, prosecutors said.
Similar(55)
Last November, Obama administration officials met with their Russian counterparts to demand that they admit to building a new cruise missile in violation of the treaty, but the Russian side denied it.
PC Card versions of Ricochet modems are just beginning to ship for about $300, at a time, alas, when the firm has admitted to troubles building its spotty system.
"It was of course ridiculous that the UK government thought my presence would in any way lead to violence," Wilders told a scrum of TV cameras and reporters, admitted to a building owned by Westminster Abbey only after being searched by his personal security men.
Amidst his narrative, Leach noted that many of the rebels were young boys between 15 and 18 years of age, along with a number of women: I am told by a priest who was admitted to the building [the Post Office] it contained 500 or 600 men and a score or so of young women, who proposed to cook and nurse.
In United States v. Grace (1983), a case challenging the ban on expressive activity in front of the Supreme Court, the justices ruled that "[t]he Court grounds are not transformed into 'public forum' property merely because the public is permitted to freely enter and leave the grounds at practically all times and is admitted to the building during specified hours".
Litigators for both tenants and landlords say cases involving people's demands to have service animals admitted to no-pets buildings in New York have risen sharply in the last two years, with rulings often in the tenants' favor.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com