English

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Etymology

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From non- +‎ concession.

Noun

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nonconcession (uncountable)

  1. Absence of concession; failure or refusal to concede.
    • 2008 June 8, Frank Rich, “One Historic Night, Two Americas”, in New York Times[1]:
      Yet even as the two establishment candidates huffed and puffed to assert their authority, they seemed terrified by Mr. Obama’s insurgency, as if it were the plague in Edgar Allan Poe’s “Masque of the Red Death.” Mrs. Clinton held her nonconcession speech in a Manhattan bunker, banishing cellphone reception and television monitors carrying the news of Mr. Obama’s clinching of the nomination. Mr. McCain, laboring under the misapprehension that he was wittily skewering his opponent, compulsively invoked the Obama-patented mantra of “change” 33 times in his speech.