submit
submit — verb
1. to hand over a piece of writing such as a report, a form, or an application to t
to hand over a piece of writing such as a report, a form, or an application to the person or group that will examine it and say what to do next
Padma submitted her college application two weeks before the deadline.
submit + application + to + institution
All reports must be submitted to the department head by Friday.
passive: must be submitted + to + person
Yuki submitted a proposal for a new recycling programme to the city council.
The contractor submitted an estimate for the kitchen renovation.
- withdraw
to take back a document or application before it is processed
文法句型
submit + noun + to + noun/pronoun
用法筆記
Frequently passive (be submitted). The person or body receiving the document is introduced by the preposition to. This sense is the most common meaning of submit across formal written English.
常見錯誤
2. to suggest or argue that something is true, especially in a formal setting such
to suggest or argue that something is true, especially in a formal setting such as a court, a meeting, or a piece of academic writing
The defence lawyer submitted that her client had acted in self-defence.
submit + that-clause in legal context
I would respectfully submit that the committee has overlooked a key piece of evidence.
formal register: respectfully submit that…
Ziad submitted in his report that the current system was no longer fit for purpose.
The scholar submitted that the data had been interpreted incorrectly by previous researchers.
文法句型
submit + that-clause
用法筆記
Almost always followed by a that-clause. Common in legal arguments and formal debates. The adverb respectfully is frequently used before the verb ('I respectfully submit that…') as a politeness marker.
常見錯誤
3. to accept a stronger person's authority or to agree reluctantly to their demands
to accept a stronger person's authority or to agree reluctantly to their demands, because resisting seems useless or impossible
After months of fighting, the rebel army finally submitted to the government.
submit + to + authority
Soraya refused to submit to the pressure and kept working on her own terms.
submit + to + pressure
The patient agreed to submit to the treatment after the doctor explained the risks.
Paloma would not submit to the bully's demands and reported her instead.
文法句型
submit + to + noun
submit + to + -ing form
用法筆記
Intransitive — requires the preposition to before the object. The subject loses or gives up something (freedom, pride, resistance). A stronger, more emotionally charged word than the near-synonyms yield or give in.