He forbade the pupil from using his phone in class.
The us of phones in class was forbidden.
Neither, it is a verb.
Is not aloud Is not aloud It's not aloud can't do that It's not aloud can't do that
The word forbade has two syllables. The syllables in the word are for-bade.
An injunction is a court order forbidding a person from doing a specific thing, or less often, commanding a person to do a thing. E.g. "The landholder obtained an injunction against his neighbour which forbade the construction of a giant tower on the neighbour's land."
Every country or language has a saying like this. It means to be involved in a superfluous act or to do something useless. In Yiddish it is carrying straw to Egypt. Since Pharoah forbade the Jewish slaves to use straw in making bricks, to take straw there would be useless. In England it's, bringing coals to Newcastle, in the U.S. it's closing the barn door after the horse is out. Idioms are fun.
forbade
I forbade you from coming here again.He forbade himself from alcohol.
what is the opposite of Forbade and begins with O
The Proclamation of 1763 forbade settlement beyond the Alleghenies.
The past tense of "forbid" would be "forbade".Forbade.
yes"Forbade" is not a word, it is the past tense of the VERB "to forbide"
Don't tell me that you forgot that I forbade you to leave the house.
I explicitly forbade Ginny M. W. from ever having contact with that horrendous boy ever again. Another example: John forbade Sally to eat his cookie, but she did anyways. The history teacher forbade me to access this site during class.
Forbade is already the past tense of the verb forbid. The past participle is forbidden.
For bade, or forbade, one word. Forbade is the past tense of forbid - to order you to not do something.
Prohibited.
forbade