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Licence ˈlaɪsns Driving Freedom Noun Applicants Hold Valid

Word3 licence
WordType (noun)
Phonetic /ˈlaɪsns/ /ˈlaɪsns/
Example
  • applicants must hold a valid driving licence.
  • to get/obtain/have a licence
  • to grant/issue a licence
  • james lost his licence for six months (= had his licence taken away by the police as a punishment).
Sound Online sound. https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/media/english/us_pron/l/lic/licen/licence__us_2.mp3
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Content

licence

(noun)/ˈlaɪsns/ /ˈlaɪsns/
  1. an official document that shows that permission has been given to do, own or use something
    • SEE ALSO driving licence
      https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/driving-licence
    • Applicants must hold a valid driving licence.
    • to get/obtain/have a licence
    • to grant/issue a licence
    • James lost his licence for six months (= had his licence taken away by the police as a punishment).
    • Her licence was revoked by the court.
    • a licence for the software
    • You need a licence to fish in this river.
    • He was caught driving a car without a licence.
    • Is there a licence fee?
    • a licence holder (= a person who has been given a licence)
    • a licence agreement

    Extra Examples

    • He's had his licence taken away.
    • She gained her private pilot's licence.
    • The CD-ROM comes with a single-user licence.
    • The bar was refused a music licence.
    • The company has won the licence to run trains from the south coast to London.
    • The government is currently granting no operating licences to foreign companies.
    • The licence expires at the end of the year.
    • The weapons were exported under a special export licence.
    • You have to have a licence to sell beer.
    • a licence for software manufacture
    • a licence from the Performing Rights Society
    • He did not have a gun licence.
    • The premises did not have an entertainment licence.
    • Who holds the licence for these premises?
    • Your local authority should be able to issue you with a licence.
    • a liquor licence
  2. freedom to do or say whatever you want, often something bad or unacceptable
    • Lack of punishment seems to give youngsters licence to break the law.
  3. freedom to behave in a way that is not considered sexually moral
  4. the freedom of artists or writers to change facts in order to make a story, painting, etc. more interesting or beautiful
  5. used to describe a business that makes a lot of money with little effort
  6. made with the permission of a company or an organization
    • They are Italian trains, but they will be built in Britain under licence.
    • The beer is brewed under licence in the UK.

    Word Origin

    • late Middle English: via Old French from Latin licentia ‘freedom, sexually immoral behaviour’ (in medieval Latin ‘authority, permission’), from licere ‘be lawful or permitted’.
Copyright This card's content is collected from the following dictionaries: Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Tags: b2

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