All forbid antonyms
for·bid
F f verb forbid
- encourage — Give support, confidence, or hope to (someone).
- authorise — to give authority or official power to; empower: to authorize an employee to sign purchase orders.
- aid — Aid is money, equipment, or services that are provided for people, countries, or organizations who need them but cannot provide them for themselves.
- assist — If you assist someone, you help them to do a job or task by doing part of the work for them.
- include — to contain, as a whole does parts or any part or element: The package includes the computer, program, disks, and a manual.
- permit — to allow to do something: Permit me to explain.
- welcome — a kindly greeting or reception, as to one whose arrival gives pleasure: to give someone a warm welcome.
- release — to lease again.
- facilitate — to make easier or less difficult; help forward (an action, a process, etc.): Careful planning facilitates any kind of work.
- sanction — authoritative permission or approval, as for an action.
- allow — If someone is allowed to do something, it is all right for them to do it and they will not get into trouble.
- help — to give or provide what is necessary to accomplish a task or satisfy a need; contribute strength or means to; render assistance to; cooperate effectively with; aid; assist: He planned to help me with my work. Let me help you with those packages.
- let go — to move or proceed, especially to or from something: They're going by bus.
- add — ADD is an abbreviation for attention deficit disorder.
- approve — If you approve of an action, event, or suggestion, you like it or are pleased about it.
- continue — If someone or something continues to do something, they keep doing it and do not stop.
- go — to move or proceed, especially to or from something: They're going by bus.
- admit — If you admit that something bad, unpleasant, or embarrassing is true, you agree, often unwillingly, that it is true.
- free — enjoying personal rights or liberty, as a person who is not in slavery: a land of free people.
- advance — To advance means to move forward, often in order to attack someone.
- forward — toward or at a place, point, or time in advance; onward; ahead: to move forward; from this day forward; to look forward.
- push — to press upon or against (a thing) with force in order to move it away.
- support — to bear or hold up (a load, mass, structure, part, etc.); serve as a foundation for.
- authorize — If someone in a position of authority authorizes something, they give their official permission for it to happen.