They were told they would need a permit from the city if they were going to stage a protest. She was excited about receiving her driving permit.
You can use "disallow" in a sentence to indicate that something is not permitted or prohibited. For example, "The rules disallow outside food in the classroom."
Some synonyms for "permitted" include allowed, approved, authorized, and acceptable.
Permitted is the past participle of permit.
The past tense of "permit" would be "permitted".
you give someone permission, you permit them to do it, and you permitted them to do it yesterday.
The child was not permitted to leave the house.
Both are correct, it depends on how they are used in the sentence.
People aren't permitted to park their cars in front of the museum.
Motor vehicle are not permitted in the Pedestrian Precinct.
No evidence is found yet. No you are not permitted to do this.
There is a grey area in the rules; it's not clear if that is permitted or not.
I got a citation because lighting a campfire outside of a designated campsite is not permitted in the national forest. My normally punctual arrival to school today was not permitted, due to an unforeseen traffic snarl.
You can use "disallow" in a sentence to indicate that something is not permitted or prohibited. For example, "The rules disallow outside food in the classroom."
"Only clubs and their affiliated foot ball players are permitted to enter the field of play".
Profane language is not permitted at school.
The senior friar at the abbey is the only one permitted speak to outsiders and only for abbey business.
The word because is perfectly acceptable at the beginning of an English sentence, and indeed there is no word in English that may not begin a sentence. A format that forbids because or any other English word from beginning an English sentence is irretrievably faulty.