licence. Notice the second 'c'.
The opposite of license is prohibition.
A revoked license means the license was taken away. A restricted license means someone still has a license, but is limited in what they can do with it. For example, a person cannot legally drive with a revoked drivers license, but might be able to legally drive to and from work with a restricted license.
License suspension is a temporary withdrawal of driving privileges, usually for a specific period of time, after which the license can be reinstated. License revocation is a more serious penalty that completely invalidates the driver's license, requiring the individual to reapply for a new license after a specified period and meeting certain conditions.
To write "Did he lose his license?" as a statement, you would simply say "He lost his license."
It is a Noun !
License can be a noun or a verb.
The noun license can be used both as a concrete noun and an abstract noun depending on context.The noun license is an abstract noun as a word for permission.The noun license is a concrete noun as a word for a word for a written document, or other physical object such as a number, a plate, or a sticker showing authorization.
The word 'licensing' is a gerund, a verbal noun; the present participle of the verb to license that functions as a noun. The present participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.The word license is both a noun and a verb.The noun 'license' is a word for a permit from an authority to own or use something; a document, plate, or tag that is issued as proof of official or legal permission.Other noun forms of the verb to license are licensor and licensee.
licence (noun) = licencia(to) license (verb) = licenciar
The US spelling of the plural is "driver's licenses" (one driver).The UK spelling of the noun form is licence.
It can be used as a concrete noun or an abstract noun depending on context.License to mean a tangible written document would be a concrete noun.(e.g. driver's license, pet liicnse)License can also more generally mean permission or a grant of use, which is an abstract noun. (e.g. artistic license)
Traditionally, the Direct Object is defined as the noun that immediately follows the verb (more precisely, the noun in the noun phrase that immediately follows the verb phrase). An indirect object is any noun that does NOT belong to the noun phrase immediately following the verb phrase. In the sentence above, 'license' (from the noun phrase "my license") would be the Indirect Object.
The plural of "license" is "licenses".
License or licence depending on your meaning. License is the verb, "I license this bar." Licence is the noun,"My driving licence."
A Latin equivalent of the English noun 'license' is copia, in terms of 'license' as official permission. Another is licentia, in terms of 'license' as unwarranted freedom. The Latin equivalent of the English verb 'to license' is potestatem dare, in which the noun 'potestatem' means 'power' and the verb 'dare' means 'to give'.
The correct spelling in the US for the verb or noun is license (permit).In the UK, the spelling of the noun is licence.
The spelling "licence" is the UK spelling of the noun form of the verb license.US spelling uses license for both the noun and verb forms.