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1 grant
1. verb1) (to agree to, to give: Would you grant me one favour; He granted the man permission to leave.) innvilge, gi, innrømme, bevilge2) (to agree or admit: I grant (you) that it was a stupid thing to do.) innrømme, tilstå2. noun(money given for a particular purpose: He was awarded a grant for studying abroad.) bevilgning, stipend, midler- granted- granting
- take for grantedbevilling--------konsesjon--------skjenkeIsubst. \/ɡrɑːnt\/1) støtte, bidrag, bevilgning, tilskudd2) stipend, legat3) tilståelse4) ( jus) skriftlig overdragelsemake somebody a grant bevilge penger til noen, gi noen et tilskuddIIverb \/ɡrɑːnt\/1) oppfylle, bønnhøre2) bevilge, innvilge, tildele, tilstå3) gi, yte, skjenke4) tilstå, innrømme, medgi5) ( jus) overdraGod grant that... Gud gi at...granted sant nok for all delgranted that eller granting that sett at, forutsatt atselv omgrant somebody a pardon benåde noengrant somebody's prayer bønnhøre noengrant somebody their wish oppfylle noens ønskeI grant you all that jeg innrømmer alt det derit is not granted to everybody to... det er ikke alle gitt å..., det er ikke alle forunt å...take somebody for granted ta noen for gitttake something for granted ta noe for gitt
См. также в других словарях:
grant permission — index allow (authorize), authorize, bestow, permit, suffer (permit) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton … Law dictionary
permission — n. 1) to give, grant permission 2) planning permission (BE; AE has building permit) 3) permission to + inf. (we had permission to leave early) * * * [pə mɪʃ(ə)n] grant permission to give planning permission (BE;AE has building permit) permission… … Combinatory dictionary
grant — /grænt / (say grant), /grant / (say grahnt) verb (t) 1. to bestow or confer, especially by a formal act: to grant a right. 2. to give or accord: to grant permission. 3. to agree or accede to: to grant a request. 4. to admit or concede; accept for …
permission — per|mis|sion W3S2 [pəˈmıʃən US pər ] n [U] when someone is officially allowed to do something ▪ You must ask permission before taking any photographs inside the church. ▪ They didn t have permission to cross the frontier. ▪ Who gave him… … Dictionary of contemporary English
grant — The issuance of an award under a stock plan, such as a stock option or shares of restricted stock. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary * * * ▪ I. grant grant 1 [grɑːnt ǁ grænt] noun [countable] FINANCE a sum of money given to a person or organization… … Financial and business terms
permission*/*/ — [pəˈmɪʃ(ə)n] noun [U] the right to do something that is given to you by someone in authority You are not allowed to camp here without permission.[/ex] Children should ask their parents permission before making phone calls.[/ex] Who gave you… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
grant — grantable, adj. grantedly, adv. granter, n. /grant, grahnt/, v.t. 1. to bestow or confer, esp. by a formal act: to grant a charter. 2. to give or accord: to grant permission. 3. to agree or accede to: to grant a request. 4. to admit or concede;… … Universalium
grant — [[t]grænt, grɑnt[/t]] v. grant•ed, grant•ing, n. v.t. 1) to confer, esp. by a formal act: to grant a charter[/ex] 2) to give; accord: to grant permission[/ex] 3) to agree to: to grant a request[/ex] 4) to accept for the sake of argument: I grant… … From formal English to slang
grant — 1 vt 1: to permit as a right or privilege grant a new trial the Supreme Court grant ed certiorari 2: to bestow or transfer formally; specif: to transfer the possession or title of by a deed: convey … Law dictionary
permission — per‧mis‧sion [pəˈmɪʆn ǁ pər ] noun [countable, uncountable] when someone is officially told that they are allowed to do something: permission to do something • The Board denied the company permission to build the pipeline. • The officer approved … Financial and business terms
permission — permission, leave, sufferance denote the sanction which enables one to do something that requires the consent of those in authority. Permission is the ordinary term except in some conventional phrases; it commonly implies the power or authority… … New Dictionary of Synonyms