3000 English common words - Oxford by CEFR
Permitted Permit Verb Pəˈmɪt Pərˈmɪt Mobile Phones Examination
| Word3 |
permit |
| WordType |
(verb) |
| Phonetic |
/pəˈmɪt/ /pərˈmɪt/ |
| Example |
- mobile phones are not permitted in the examination room.
- we were not permitted any contact with each other.
- visitors are not permitted to take photographs.
- the owners have been unwilling to permit the use of their land.
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| Sound |
Online sound. https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/media/english/us_pron/p/per/permi/permit__us_1.mp3 |
| Image |
Search images by the word https://www.google.com/search?biw=1280&bih=661&tbm=isch&sa=1&q=permit |
| Content |
permit(verb)/pəˈmɪt/ /pərˈmɪt/Verb Forms- to allow somebody to do something or to allow something to happen
- Mobile phones are not permitted in the examination room.
- We were not permitted any contact with each other.
- Visitors are not permitted to take photographs.
- The owners have been unwilling to permit the use of their land.
- There are fines for exceeding permitted levels of noise pollution.
- Jim permitted himself a wry smile.
- The bill was designed to permit new fathers to take time off work.
- She would not permit herself to look at them.
- Permit me to offer you some advice.
Extra Examples- Development is not normally permitted in conservation areas.
- A new constitution permitted the formation of political parties.
- People are breathing in more than five times the permitted level of pollutants.
- Permit me to make a suggestion.
- The banks were not permitted to invest overseas.
- The rules of the club do not permit it.
- They were permitted to stay in the country on humanitarian grounds.
- to make something possible
- We hope to visit the cathedral, if time permits.
- I'll come tomorrow, weather permitting (= if the weather is fine).
- The password permits access to all files on the hard disk.
- The length of the report does not permit a detailed discussion of the problems.
- Cash machines permit you to withdraw money at any time.
Word Origin- late Middle English (originally in the sense ‘commit, hand over’): from Latin permittere, from per- ‘through’ + mittere ‘send, let go’.
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| Copyright |
This card's content is collected from the following dictionaries: Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary |
Tags:
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3000 English common words - Oxford by CEFR