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Granted Common

Granted has 4 different meanings across 1 category:

Adjective

Definitions
Verb
1

simple past tense and past participle of grant

"The committee granted permission for the event to proceed after reviewing all safety protocols."

In plain English: To grant something means to give it officially or agree to let someone have what they asked for.

"Granted that you are right, I still disagree with your conclusion."

Usage: Use granted to indicate that you have formally given permission or approval for something previously requested. It functions as the standard past form when describing an action where authority was successfully conferred.

Adjective
1

acknowledged as a supposition

"given the engine's condition, it is a wonder that it started"

2

used to mark the premise of a syllogistic argument

"Granted that inflation is rising, we must still consider how it impacts our fixed salaries."

In plain English: Granted means something is officially accepted or given as true without needing more proof.

"That is granted, but we still need to decide on a time for the meeting."

Usage: Do not use "granted" as an adjective; it functions only as a verb or adverb to acknowledge a point or introduce a hypothetical scenario in an argument. In everyday speech, say "I grant that..." or "Granted,..." instead of treating the word as a descriptive modifier.

Adverb
1

Used to concede a point, often before stating some contrasting information.

"Granted, the new policy has some benefits, but it will ultimately cost too much to implement effectively."

In plain English: Granted means something is accepted as true for the sake of an argument, even if it isn't actually correct.

"Granted, the plan is ambitious, but we will try our best to make it work."

Usage: Use "granted" as an adverb to acknowledge that someone's argument has merit before introducing a counterpoint. It functions similarly to "true," signaling concession within the flow of your sentence.

Example Sentences
"That is granted, but we still need to decide on a time for the meeting." adj
"Granted, the plan is ambitious, but we will try our best to make it work." adv
"Granted that you are right, I still disagree with your conclusion." verb
Related Terms

Origin

Derived from Old French grantir, granted originally meant to make great or enlarge. It evolved in Middle English to signify giving consent or admitting something as true.

Rhyming Words
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