LEAVE vs ALLOW: NOUN
- Synonyms Leave, Liberty, License. These words imply that the permission granted may be used or not. Leave is the lightest, is generally personal, and is used on familiar occasions. Liberty is more often connected with more important matters; it indicates full freedom, and perhaps that obstacles are completely cleared from the path. License, primarily the state of being permitted by law, may retain this meaning (as, license to sell iutoxicating drinks), or it may go so far as to mean that unlawful or undue advantage is taken of legal permission or social for bearance: as, liberty easily degenerates into license.
- Originally, to receive formal permission, as from a superior, to depart; now, to part with some expression of farewell; bid farewell or adieu.
- Specifically Liberty to depart; permission to be absent: as, to take leave. See below.
- Liberty granted to do something, or for some specific action or course of conduct; permission; allowance; license.
- A leaving; something left or remaining.
- An act of departing; a farewell.
- Permission to do something. : permission.
- The act of departing politely
- The period of time during which you are absent from work or duty
- Permission to do something
- N/A
LEAVE vs ALLOW: VERB
- Move out of or depart from
- Leave or give by will after one's death
- Leave behind unintentionally
- Put into the care or protection of someone
- Tell or deposit (information) knowledge
- Go away from a place
- Leave unchanged or undisturbed or refrain from taking
- Go and leave behind, either intentionally or by neglect or forgetfulness
- Be survived by after one's death
- Have left or have as a remainder
- Act or be so as to become in a specified state
- Make a possibility or provide opportunity for; permit to be attainable or cause to remain
- Result in
- Remove oneself from an association with or participation in
- Give or assign a resource to a particular person or cause
- To render physically possible
- To take into account by making an allowance.
- To acknowledge or concede.
- To not bar or obstruct.
- Make a possibility or provide opportunity for; permit to be attainable or cause to remain
- Consent to, give permission
- Afford possibility
- Allow the other (baseball) team to score
- Make it possible through a specific action or lack of action for something to happen
- Allow the presence of or allow (an activity) without opposing or prohibiting
- Give or assign a share of money or time to a particular person or cause
- Allow or plan for a certain possibility; concede the truth or validity of something
- Grant as a discount or in exchange
- Let have
LEAVE vs ALLOW: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To send out leaves; to leaf; -- often with out.
- To set out or depart; go.
- To allow or permit; let.
- To cause or permit to be or remain.
- To give or deposit, as for use or information, upon one's departure or in one's absence.
- To abandon or forsake.
- To give over to another to control or act on.
- To bequeath.
- To have remaining after death.
- To cause or allow to be or remain in a specified state.
- To have as a result, consequence, or remainder.
- To omit or exclude.
- To go without taking or removing.
- To go out of or away from.
- To put forth foliage; leaf.
- To permit; to admit.
- To admit; to concede; to make allowance or abatement.
- To take a possibility into account; make allowance.
- To offer a possibility; admit.
- To assert; declare.
- To think; suppose.
- To admit; concede.
- To grant as a discount or in exchange.
- To plan for in case of need.
- To make provision for; assign.
- To permit to have.
- To permit the presence of.
- To let do or happen; permit.
LEAVE vs ALLOW: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To grant license to; to permit; to consent to.
- To grant (something) as a deduction or an addition; esp. to abate or deduct.
- To own or acknowledge; to accept as true; to concede; to accede to an opinion
- To grant, give, admit, accord, afford, or yield; to let one have
- To sanction; to invest; to intrust.
- To like; to be suited or pleased with.
- To praise; to approve of; hence, to sanction.
LEAVE vs ALLOW: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Have as a result or residue
- Transmit (knowledge or skills)
- Produce as a result or residue
- To give over; cease; leave off.
- To go away; depart: as, he left by the last steamer; I am to leave to-morrow; the next train leaves at 10.
- To remain; be left.
- (c ) To give up or cease to associate with.
- To cease wearing or using; lay aside; give up: as, to leave off a garment; to leave off tobacco.
- To suffer or permit to continue; fail to change the state, condition, or course of; let remain as existing: as, to leave one free to act; leave him in peace; leave it as it is.
- To quit, as the doing of anything; cease or desist from; give over; leave off: followed, to express the verbal action, by a verbal noun in -ing, or formerly by an infinitive with to.
- To separate or withdraw from; part company or relinquish connection with; forsake; abandon; desert: as, to leave a church or society; to leave one occupation for another; he has left the path of rectitude.
- To go away or depart from; quit, whether temporarily or permanently.
- To let remain or have remaining at death; hence, to transmit, bequeath, or give by will: as, he leaves a wife and children, and has left his property in trust for their use.
- To let remain for a purpose; confide, commit, or refer: as, to leave the decision of a question to an umpire; I leave that to your judgment.
- To place or deliver with intent to let remain; part from by giving or yielding up: as, to leave papers at the houses of subscribers; to leave money on deposit.
- To let remain; fail or neglect to take away, remove, or destroy; allow to stay or exist: as, he left his baggage behind him; 5 from 12 leaves 7; only a few were left alive.
- [The verb leave, permit, allow, is generally confused with leave, permit to remain, quit, etc., from which, however, it differs in construction. Leave is now generally followed by an indirect object of the person, and an infinitive with to: as, I leave you to decide. In vulgar speech leave is often used for let without to: as, leave me be; leave me go.]
- [The Middle English form leve (that is, as usually written, leue) is often confounded in manuscripts and early printed editions with lene, to grant, lend.
- To give leave to; permit; allow; let; grant.
- To raise; levy.
- Same as leaf.
- (idiom) (leave no stone unturned) To make every possible effort.
- (idiom) (leave/let) To refrain from disturbing or interfering.
- Consent to, give permission; permit
- To permit; admit: with of: as, “of this allow,”
- To make abatement, concession, or provision: followed by for: as, to allow for the tare.
- Suffer is still more passive or reluctant than allow, and may imply that one does not prevent something, though it is contrary to one's feelings, judgment, or sense of right. To tolerate is to bear with something unpleasant: as, I would not tolerate such impertinence. Many things are tolerated, or suffered, or even allowed, that are not permitted, and many are permitted that are not really consented to, much less sanctioned.
- Consent to is formally to permit that which one has the power and generally some disposition to prevent; it implies the assumption of responsibility for that which is thus allowed. Sanction has a secondary sense of permitting with expressed or implied approbation: as, I cannot sanction such a course.
- Synonyms Allow, Permit, Consent to, Sanction, Suffer, Tolerate. Allow and permit are often used synonymously; but permit strictly denotes a formal or implied assent; allow, the absence of an intent, or even only of an attempt, to hinder.
- To assert, declare, say; or, of mental assertion, to mean, purpose, intend, or, simply, think: the concessive sense presented assertively.
- To invest; intrust.
- To grant special license or indulgence to.
- To grant permission to; permit: as, to allow a son to be absent.
- To abate or deduct; take into account; set apart: as, to allow so much for loss; to allow a sum for tare or leakage.
- To admit; concede; confess; own; acknowledge: as, to allow the right of private judgment; he allowed that he was wrong; he allowed it might be so.
- To grant, give, or yield; assign; afford: as, to allow a free passage.
- To praise or commend; approve, justify, or sanction.
LEAVE vs ALLOW: RELATED WORDS
- Get out, Lead, Will, Impart, Entrust, Parting, Allow, Exit, Bequeath, Forget, Farewell, Give, Let, Quit, Depart
- Enable, Allow for, Take into account, Provide for, Set aside, Give up, Reserve, Admit, Earmark, Countenance, Grant, Appropriate, Leave, Permit, Let
LEAVE vs ALLOW: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Result, Go away, Lead, Will, Entrust, Parting, Allow, Exit, Bequeath, Forget, Farewell, Give, Let, Quit, Depart
- Enables, Enabled, Enabling, Enable, Allow for, Take into account, Give up, Reserve, Admit, Earmark, Grant, Appropriate, Leave, Permit, Let
LEAVE vs ALLOW: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- They also may require leave after already taken leave of absence application.
- Family and Medical Leave Act leave when we let her go.
- To provide paid sick leave, paid family leave, and paid medical leave for home health workers and direct service workers.
- How will furlough leave affect those on maternity leave or due to go on maternity leave?
- Accumulated annual leave, sick leave, or leave without pay may be requested for absences extending beyond the period of certified disability.
- Recreation leave, long service leave, leave without pay.
- Excess leave is authorized leave over and beyond any earned or advance leave that can be granted.
- Relevant statutory leaves include Family Leave, Sick Leave, Leave for Care of a Critically Ill Child.
- OFLA leave, that employee must exhaust all accrued sick leave before taking leave without pay.
- Approved paid leave, including annual leave, hospitalisation leave and maternity leave.
- Allow resubmission of form for the selected client.
- Jnd to allow flood control on the east.
- What does facing pages allow you to do?
- Allow to merge remote branches into local ones.
- Both degrees will allow nurses to become APRNs.
- This random number generator does not allow duplicates.
- Allow passwords to be transmitted without any encryption.
- Some traffic courts allow you to pay online.
- XML file to allow the device level tunnel, and your SSTP service should also be configured to allow computer certificates.
- Site via google forms allow them to develop their behavior expectations they allow teachers a classroom observation periods in this.
LEAVE vs ALLOW: QUESTIONS
- Why did Shelby Cooper leave the Tennessee Volunteers?
- When did Suleiman the Magnificent leave Constantinople?
- Why did Shinsuke Nakamura leave Johnny & Associates?
- Does paid maternity leave reduce domestic violence?
- Why did Toni leave girlfriends and why did she leave?
- Which is correct, 'shall I leave' or 'Can I leave'?
- What happens to my leave balance if I buy back leave?
- What happens to advanced sick leave when you leave the government?
- How much compassionate leave do you get for maternity leave?
- How do you calculate hospitalization leave from sick leave?
- Does Zillow allow employees to telecommute permanently?
- Which image formats allow for transparent backgrounds?
- Which countries allow dual citizenship with Bulgaria?
- Does Southwest Airlines allow lap children tickets?
- Does the Dominican Republic allow dual citizenship?
- Does Texas foreclosure law allow deficiency judgments?
- Does Maven allow cyclic dependencies between projects?
- Should Texas community colleges allow campus carry?
- Which states allow pharmacists to prescribe contraceptives?
- Does Virginia allow criminal conversation lawsuits?