0 past simple and past participle of prohibit --
1 to officially refuse to allow something: --
The loudness of the music prohibits serious conversation in most nightclubs.
The government introduced a law prohibiting tobacco advertisements on TV.
Motor vehicles are prohibited from driving in the town centre.
He is merely shown mercy, but the act is still prohibited, and he is still guilty.
Perfect consonances were required and imperfect ones prohibited for ending a discant.
The shaded area corresponds to the shocks prohibited by the entropy condition.
This means that the class of desires that are prohibited is much broader than the standard interpretation allows.
At the same time, literacy was prohibited for them.
Are there act-types that are morally significant even though neither required nor prohibited?
Notable for our discussion here is the section on prohibited activities.
Previous discussion established that such a person must learn something that extends to act-tokens picked out as required, prohibited, or permitted.