eventhough; although, notwithstanding
"Albeit" [pronounced all-bee-it] is a word not often used in English today, but it has a long history.In Middle English, spoken from around 1150 to about 1500, the phrase was al be, which means "although it may be". At some stage these words were all glued together as albeit, with the same meaning.An example of its use is: "Albeit that she promised to marry him, she has eloped with someone else".
He has a very good idea, albeit a strange one.
although
albeit
In addition
She told the truth; albeit bitterly.
Your question is an example, albeit flawed, of a sentence containing the word "atheist."
The word you are looking for is albeit, pronounced as ôlˈbēit,alˈbēit. It means although, or even though, and is often used to show contrast or even irony.The man with a sprained ankle finished the race, albeit slowly and with much grimacing.
Ta is an English word, albeit colloquial. Mostly used in Britain, it means thank you.
Whilst or albeit depending on whether it refers to a period of time, or in place of 'although' respectively.During
Albeit is a conjunction
the word beseech is modern English, albeit a little irregular for colloquial speech.Any of the following are acceptable synonyms:begimploreentreatsupplicateprayplead