concession vs positive

concession

noun
  • Any admission of the validity or rightness of a point; an instance of this. 

  • A franchise: a business operated as a concession (see above). 

  • A concession road: a narrow road between tracts of farmland, especially in Ontario, from their origin during the granting of concessions (see above). 

  • The act of conceding. 

  • A right to operate a quasi-independent business within another's premises, as with concession stands. 

  • A preferential tax rate. 

  • A discounted price offered to certain classes of people, such as students or the elderly. 

  • An admission of defeat following an election. 

  • A territory—usually an enclave in a major port—yielded to the administration of a foreign power. 

  • A person eligible for a concession price (see above). 

  • A compromise: a partial yielding to demands or requests. 

  • A portion of a township, especially equal lots once granted to settlers in Canada. 

  • A right to operate a quasi-independent franchise of a larger company. 

  • The premises granted to a business as a concession (see below) 

  • An item sold within a concession (see above) or from a concessions stand. 

  • An admission of the validity of an opponent's point in order to build an argument upon it or to move on to another of greater importance; an instance of this. 

  • A right to use land or an offshore area for a specific purpose, such as oil exploration. 

  • A gift freely given or act freely made as a token of respect or to curry favor. 

verb
  • To grant or approve by means of a concession agreement. 

positive

noun
  • A favourable point or characteristic. 

  • A degree of comparison of adjectives and adverbs. 

  • A positive result of a test. 

  • An adjective or adverb in the positive degree. 

  • A positive image; one that displays true colors and shades, as opposed to a negative. 

  • A thing capable of being affirmed; something real or actual. 

  • Something having a positive value in physics, such as an electric charge. 

  • The positive plate of a voltaic or electrolytic cell. 

adj
  • Not negative or neutral. 

  • Stated definitively and without qualification. 

  • Describing the primary sense of an adjective, adverb or noun; not comparative, superlative, augmentative nor diminutive. 

  • Optimistic. 

  • Good, desirable, healthful, pleasant, enjoyable; (often precedes 'energy', 'thought', 'feeling' or 'emotion'). 

  • Overconfident, dogmatic. 

  • Of a visual image, true to the original in light, shade and colour values. 

  • Of number, greater than zero. 

  • Having more protons than electrons. 

  • HIV positive. 

  • Characterized by constructiveness or influence for the better. 

  • Wholly what is expressed; colloquially downright, entire, outright. 

  • Characterized by the presence of features which support a hypothesis. 

  • Favorable, desirable by those interested or invested in that which is being judged. 

  • Formally laid down. 

  • Derived from an object by itself; not dependent on changing circumstances or relations. 

  • Characterized by the existence or presence of distinguishing qualities or features, rather than by their absence. 

  • electropositive 

  • Fully assured in opinion. 

  • Actual, real, concrete, not theoretical or speculative. 

  • Describing a verb that is not negated, especially in languages which have distinct positive and negative verb forms, e.g., Finnish. 

  • basic; metallic; not acid; opposed to negative, and said of metals, bases, and basic radicals. 

How often have the words concession and positive occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )