A quantity of no importance.
Sinónimos
Examples for "forbid"
Examples for "forbid"
1China's rulers forbid opposition parties and maintain strict control over all media.
2And you should also be able to forbid certain things from happening.
3For a time she'd thought he'd forbid her to continue her walk.
4Months later, she still doesn't understand why her parents forbid the shortcut.
5It is looking at ways around EU rules that forbid such intervention.
1Either house could reject the resolution, and the president has veto power.
2Opposition politicians said they would seek ways to challenge the government's veto.
3The Prime Minister also raised concerns about council members' right to veto.
4Russia and China are among the Security Council's five permanent, veto-holding members.
5Parliament passed the law seven months ago, overturning a veto from Karzai.
1New - Such devices allowed, unless local rule adopted to prohibit use.
2Gross said Army grooming regulations, which prohibit beards, override his religious exercise.
3It said the agency supports legislation in Congress that would prohibit them.
4Missouri has a similar law that would prohibit abortion after eight weeks.
5Interdicts are blunt instruments that prohibit particular actions on a blanket basis.
1Lead global cooperation to track and interdict the smuggling of nuclear material.
2The court's rejection of this interdict may lead to a ConCourt appeal.
3Mgidlana had hoped that the High Court would interdict his disciplinary hearing.
4For the individual, excommunication was a more dreaded penalty than the interdict.
5The farmer was forced to get a court interdict against the squatters.
1A linesman's flag was immediately raised to disallow the goal for offside.
2The agreements disallow any research that is not first approved by the companies.
3He would disallow the incestuous relationship between the King and Queen.
4I assume then that Mr Arnold would disallow people who are infertile from marrying.
5I shall never disallow all distinction between right and wrong!
1Stern even as a disciplinarian, she did not proscribe healthy and natural amusements.
2His own party, in consequence, made haste to proscribe him.
3It seems that we must always have something to proscribe!
4The Popes of Rome proscribe the light of reason.
5In Saxony Catholics and Calvinists were proscribed; in Heidelberg Catholics and Lutherans.
1Yet the new approach leaves China plenty of scope to nix investigations.
2Besides, her boyfriend's immoderate enthusiasm alone was enough to nix the idea.
3The rest, sadly, nix the idea of this as a Mac lovefest.
4So he is good for nix, the worse cur I ever saw.
5I'll give you nix naught nothing and my thanks into the bargain.
6That kind of Language went with some People, but nix for Sweeney!
7JPMorgan said neither it nor GM intended to nix the lien.
8But nix on the newspaper story; this is a private affair.
9You understand why I want to nix the mortar emplacements on the hillside?
10After she goes it's nix with the lady bookkeepers for me.
11Kings pay 'em out Saturdays when the pay roll is nix.
12But nix, it's mine.... Dal, isn't he a handsome boy here?
13The guard told them we were Canadians, but the civilians said, Oh nix!
14The question is whether antitrust regulators do what shareholders can't and nix the tie-up.
15Do you think the Swiss are right to nix nav-enabled countersurveillance by would-be speeders?
16Get all you want in the Library canteen for nix.
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