No
The opposite of "permit" is "prohibit" or "forbid," meaning to not allow or to disallow something.
Synonyms for prohibit: banned, ban, disallow, forbid, hinder, prevent.
forbid
Prohibit
Legally and lawfully - if they are considered to be sworn law enforcement officers by the state, they may legally carry a firearm. HOWEVER - their agency (Dept. of Veterans Affairs) may have some kind of an agency policy or rule that states that they may not. Under H.R. 218, VA police officers are given lawful authority to carry off-duty. This is a mandate by Congress which allows ALL federal law enforcement to carry off-duty. Though a VA facility may prohibit the bringing of off-duty firearms to work, the facility cannot overturn the Congress in terms of H.R 218.
They are antonyms. Allow is often the opposite of prohibit.
The opposite of "permit" is "prohibit" or "forbid," meaning to not allow or to disallow something.
The words "prohibit" and "allow" do not have the same meanings, so they are not synonyms; they have opposite meanings, so they are antonyms.
The opposite could be deny, refuse, disallow, reject, turn down, prohibit, or proscribe.
They are antonyms, meaning that they mean the opposite of each other. Allow means 'to let happen' and prohibit means 'to stop from happening'.
The words prohibit and forbid are more synonyms (same) than antonyms (opposite). The word prohibit means that something is not allowed. For example in a non-smoking area, smoking is prohibited. The word forbid means that something/someone is keeping something/someone from doing something. For example, the law forbids a person to drink alchohol under the age of twenty one.
Sure. So can anybody else who wants to. You don't, in general, have the right to prohibit someone from taking a picture of you.
allow, authorize, command, consent to, endure, further, give leave, let, license, order, permit, suffer, tolerate
what is to prohibit
Prohibit what?
The Torah prohibits dressing to fool other people into thinking you're of the opposite sex. It's doesn't specifically prohibit wearing clothing of the opposite sex though.
A suffix for "prohibit" could be "-ed", as in "prohibited".