Yes, the word 'admitting' is the present participle of 'to admit'. This means that while 'admitting' is a verb, it is also able to act as a noun and an adjective.
"To admit" is the infinitive of the verb.
The abstract noun form of the verb to admit are admission, admittance, and the gerund, admitting.
No admit is a verb because it is something you do. An adjective describes a noun.
No, the word admits is a verb; to admit, admits, admitted, admitting.The noun forms of the verb to admit are: admittance, admission, and the gerund, admitting.
The past and the past participle of the verb admit is admitted.
The plural noun forms for the verb to admit are admitees, admissions, and admittances.
The verb of denial is "deny." It means to refuse to admit the truth or existence of something.
The noun form for the verb to admit are admitter (one who admits), admission, admittance, and the gerund, admitting.
Admission is a noun and does not have a future tense. The verb form is admit, and the future tense is will admit.
to admit past: admitted passive: to be admitted
The roots of 'admit' are 'ad' and 'mittere'. The preposition 'ad' means 'to'. The verb 'mittere' means 'to send'.
'reconnu' is the past participle of the French verb 'reconnaitre' (meanings: to recognize, to reconnoitre, to admit, to acknowledge)