acknowledge - use in sentences

Object

  • receipt: We will acknowledge receipt of your claim by email.
  • importance: This plan is sponsored by the Heritage Council of Ireland which acknowledges the importance of the place.
  • existence: I acknowledge the existence of two kinds of quality that a museum has.
  • contribution: We acknowledge the very generous contributions which have been made over the years by the public.
  • assistance: The Green Party gratefully acknowledges the assistance of Doug Cross, environmental analyst and forensic ecologist.
  • fact: To acknowledge the fact is to abandon all hope ' .

Preposition: that

  • reliance: Users acknowledge that any reliance on material posted by others will be at their own risk.

Preposition: as

  • leader: Redstone Technology in Ireland is acknowledged as the leader for complex Enterprise Storage Solutions and is a specialist in Business Critical Enterprise-class Servers.

Modifying Another Word

  • explicitly: We may be able to tackle and explicitly acknowledge this subjectivity, by collective development.
  • universally: One thing that is almost universally acknowledged is that the original Ninja were most likely of Chinese origin.
  • widely: It has been widely acknowledged that fewer than 5 % of embryos created in IVF survive to birth.
  • openly: Not that any of the joyousness or wonder at this unexpected reunion is acknowledged openly.
  • readily: But, while readily acknowledged, they quickly fade from mind before the onslaught of one-dimensional, causal thinking.

Used with why or when

  • what: This book acknowledges what we may not want to admit to ourselves.
  • when: The diversity of jurisdiction and the spatial scale of management of grouse must be acknowledged when designing and implementing conservation programs.

Preposition: with

  • thank: We had already sent a check for £ 1,000 to CAFOD which they have acknowledged with grateful thanks.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.