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