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All permit antonyms

per·mit
P p

verb permit

  • enclave — A portion of territory within or surrounded by a larger territory whose inhabitants are culturally or ethnically distinct.
  • domiciliated — to domicile.
  • give ground — the quality or state of being resilient; springiness.
  • blue pencil — deletion, alteration, or censorship of the contents of a book or other work
  • damn — Damn, damn it, and dammit are used by some people to express anger or impatience.
  • dragoon — (especially formerly) a European cavalryman of a heavily armed troop.
  • hamper — to hold back; hinder; impede: A steady rain hampered the progress of the work.
  • circumlocute — to speak in a circuitous way
  • be-little — to regard or portray as less impressive or important than appearances indicate; depreciate; disparage.
  • constrain — To constrain someone or something means to limit their development or force them to behave in a particular way.
  • disentitle — to deprive of title or right.
  • boxed in — simple past tense and past participle of box in.
  • hold off — to have or keep in the hand; keep fast; grasp: She held the purse in her right hand. He held the child's hand in his.
  • exudate — An exuded substance, in particular.
  • keep — to hold or retain in one's possession; hold as one's own: If you like it, keep it. Keep the change.
  • expurgate — Remove matter thought to be objectionable or unsuitable from (a book or account).
  • jump — to spring clear of the ground or other support by a sudden muscular effort; leap: to jump into the air; to jump out a window.
  • damping — moistening or wetting
  • disconfirm — to prove to be invalid.
  • dismiss — to direct (an assembly of persons) to disperse or go: I dismissed the class early.
  • disbar — to expel from the legal profession or from the bar of a particular court.
  • disestablish — to deprive of the character of being established; cancel; abolish.
  • let slide — to move along in continuous contact with a smooth or slippery surface: to slide down a snow-covered hill.
  • get lost — no longer possessed or retained: lost friends.
  • chime in — If you chime in, you say something just after someone else has spoken.
  • baffle — If something baffles you, you cannot understand it or explain it.
  • amnestied — a general pardon for offenses, especially political offenses, against a government, often granted before any trial or conviction.
  • except — Specify as not included in a category or group; exclude.
  • bitted — Also called bollard. a strong post of wood or iron projecting, usually in pairs, above the deck of a ship, used for securing cables, lines for towing, etc.
  • contradict — If you contradict someone, you say that what they have just said is wrong, or suggest that it is wrong by saying something different.
  • cut capers — To engage in brief frolics, romps, or frantic, ridiculous dances.
  • anaesthetize — When a doctor or other trained person anaesthetizes a patient, they make the patient unconscious or unable to feel pain by giving them an anaesthetic.
  • gimp — a limp.
  • limit — the final, utmost, or furthest boundary or point as to extent, amount, continuance, procedure, etc.: the limit of his experience; the limit of vision.
  • eject — Force or throw (something) out, typically in a violent or sudden way.
  • omit — to leave out; fail to include or mention: to omit a name from a list.
  • house-train — to housebreak.
  • command — If someone in authority commands you to do something, they tell you that you must do it.
  • give it to — to present voluntarily and without expecting compensation; bestow: to give a birthday present to someone.
  • bring to heel — (Transitive Verb) IDI To compel someone to obey; to force someone into a submissive condition.
  • boycott — If a country, group, or person boycotts a country, organization, or activity, they refuse to be involved with it in any way because they disapprove of it.
  • house-trained — housebroken.
  • disbarred — to expel from the legal profession or from the bar of a particular court.
  • gimped — a limp.
  • expel — Deprive (someone) of membership of or involvement in a school or other organization.
  • garrote — a method of capital punishment of Spanish origin in which an iron collar is tightened around a condemned person's neck until death occurs by strangulation or by injury to the spinal column at the base of the brain.
  • look askance — glance sidelong or with suspicion
  • exscind — (medicine, surgery) To cut out.

noun permit

  • grounding — the solid surface of the earth; firm or dry land: to fall to the ground.
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