It could be to surrender
The root of concede is cedere, a Latin word meaning to yield or give up.
To yield or surrender; to give up; to resign; as, to cede a fortress, a province, or country, to another nation, by treaty.
The term "yield" can mean two things: to surrender or to produce/provide. An example of the first is to "yield" to a foe on a battlefield, or a competitor. An example of the second is that an acre of farmland may yield a certain amount of a farm crop, or a chemical reaction may yield a certain product. This is confused somewhat by the idiomatic "give in" (surrender, agree) and "give up" which has been used for surrendering but also for provide, as in "the tomb gave up its secrets" or "surrendered its hidden meaning."
The word recede has the root word cede in it. Recede means to draw back or withdrawal from something else.
For surrender as a verb (as in to surrender) then to give up, to relinquish for surrender as a noun (as in the surrender) then the giving up or relinquishing
Submit
Quit - also, the word "cede" means to yield or formally surrender to another.
The root of concede is cedere, a Latin word meaning to yield or give up.
Do you mean 'cede'? there is no word 'ceed' according to Word. Cede means to 'give up' or 'yield'.
To yield or surrender; to give up; to resign; as, to cede a fortress, a province, or country, to another nation, by treaty.
Surrender,give up, quit, throw in the towel, stop. These are some of them.
"Give up!" is just one English equivalent of the French word Baste!Specifically, the French word is the form of the present infinitive baster ("to cede, give in, give up, yield") in the present imperative. The imperative form in question is the second person singular (informal singular "you"). The pronunciation will be "bahst" in French.
It is CEDE meaning: relinquish, yield, give up, part with, give over to etc.
The term "yield" can mean two things: to surrender or to produce/provide. An example of the first is to "yield" to a foe on a battlefield, or a competitor. An example of the second is that an acre of farmland may yield a certain amount of a farm crop, or a chemical reaction may yield a certain product. This is confused somewhat by the idiomatic "give in" (surrender, agree) and "give up" which has been used for surrendering but also for provide, as in "the tomb gave up its secrets" or "surrendered its hidden meaning."
The idiomatic construction "give up" can confusingly be used for two similar meanings, and unfortunately the non-idioms (yield, surrender) have the same problem.Give up means to discontinue the game, work, task or job in hand. It can also mean to stop fighting, or surrender. But it can also be used to mean provide or reveal."If we can't solve the problem, we will have to give up." (quit)"Once we control the high ground, the enemy will have to give up." (surrender, yield)"Once deciphered, the ancient book will give up its secrets." (provide, yield, reveal)Give in is much clearer. It means you accept defeat or agree to cooperate."The opposition decided to give in, and supported the new government." (admitted defeat)
It means to fall victim to something, such as a disease.
"Give up" means to surrender or quit trying, while "give in" means to yield or concede to someone's demands or requests. "Give up" often implies a loss of hope or effort, while "give in" involves complying with someone else's wishes.