The word 'allied' is the past participle of the verb to 'ally' (allies, allying, allied), meaning to join forces, combine, associate. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective, for example: allied forces, alliedresources.
No, it is not a preposition.The word allied is the past tense and past participle of the verb "to ally" and can be used as an adjective.
Hate to say it, but this is not an actual question: there is no verb in the sentence, for starters....without a verb, this is just a phrase - an incomplete attempt at asking a question.
Alió is the 3rd person (he,she, it) past tense form of the Spanish and Catalan verb aliar meaning "to ally" So it means "He/she or it allied".
allied
allied firms
Allied.
It is an enterprise that is not specified as an allied one. There is a lot of confusion with non-allied banks and their laws.
Not necessarily. While this is true for some noun/verb pairs (allied, address), it is not for others (abuse - both on second, advocate - both on first).
meaning of allied service
he was allied with the axis powers.
allied firms
It is an enterprise that is not specified as an allied one. There is a lot of confusion with non-allied banks and their laws.