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confess
[kuhn-fes]
verb (used with object)
to acknowledge or avow (a fault, crime, misdeed, weakness, etc.) by way of revelation.
Antonyms: concealto own or admit as true.
I must confess that I haven't read the book.
Antonyms: denyto declare or acknowledge (one's sins), especially to God or a priest in order to obtain absolution.
(of a priest) to hear the confession of (a person).
to acknowledge one's belief or faith in; declare adherence to.
to reveal by circumstances.
verb (used without object)
to make confession plead guilty; own.
to confess to a crime.
to make confession of sins, especially to a priest.
(of a priest) to hear confession.
confess
/ kənˈfɛs /
verb
to make an acknowledgment or admission (of faults, misdeeds, crimes, etc)
(tr) to admit or grant to be true; concede
Christianity RC Church to declare (one's sins) to God or to a priest as his representative, so as to obtain pardon and absolution
Other Word Forms
- confessable adjective
- confessingly adverb
- half-confessed adjective
- preconfess verb (used with object)
- unconfessed adjective
- unconfessing adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of confess1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
This is the finale’s first twist, since in a previous episode, it was John’s brother Billy who was ready to confess to the crime, explaining that they had hooked up at the Ross family reunion.
Creating is her “happy place,” she confesses, which sounds like a reprieve from the experience of writing her memoir.
A man who killed his partner in a car in east London and drove her body around before confessing to his brother hours later has been sentenced to a hospital order.
She wasn’t found until eight months later, when Casey confessed to his pastor.
“The first thing I told Kobe was, I’d never seen a basketball game,” John confessed.
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