Associations to the word «Prohibition»
Noun
- Sales
- Abortion
- Northamptonshire
- Abolition
- Ordinance
- Dry
- Constitution
- Slavery
- Statute
- Exemption
- Jeopardy
- Sale
- Dowry
- Pedestrian
- M3
- Bedfordshire
- Observance
- Hemp
- Sabbath
- Biological
- Restraint
- Staffordshire
- Punishment
- Advertisement
- Protection
- Seizure
- Servitude
- Embargo
- Consumption
- Legislation
- Racket
- Intercourse
- Edict
- Drinking
- Era
- Beer
- Pork
- Caribbean
- Censorship
- Privacy
- Monopoly
- Hague
- Order
- Firearm
- Harassment
- Leach
- Interference
- Hadith
- Convention
- Prescription
- Torture
- Hoover
- Sanction
- Brothel
- Judaism
- Provision
- Override
- Eating
- Mafia
Adjective
Adverb
Wiktionary
PROHIBITION, noun. An act of prohibiting, forbidding, disallowing, or proscribing something.
PROHIBITION, noun. A law prohibiting the manufacture or sale of alcohol.
PROHIBITION, proper noun. (history) any of several periods during which the manufacture, transportation, import, export, and sale of alcoholic beverages were restricted or illegal
PROHIBITION SIGN, noun. A sign (🚫) universally associated with negation. It is completely red, and comprised of a circle with a diagonal line through it from top left to bottom right.
PROHIBITION SIGNS, noun. Plural of prohibition sign
Dictionary definition
PROHIBITION, noun. A law forbidding the sale of alcoholic beverages; "in 1920 the 18th amendment to the Constitution established prohibition in the US".
PROHIBITION, noun. A decree that prohibits something.
PROHIBITION, noun. The period from 1920 to 1933 when the sale of alcoholic beverages was prohibited in the United States by a constitutional amendment.
PROHIBITION, noun. Refusal to approve or assent to.
PROHIBITION, noun. The action of prohibiting or inhibiting or forbidding (or an instance thereof); "they were restrained by a prohibition in their charter"; "a medical inhibition of alcoholic beverages"; "he ignored his parents' forbiddance".
Wise words
It is better wither to be silent, or to say things of more
value than silence. Sooner throw a pearl at hazard than an
idle or useless word; and do not say a little in many words,
but a great deal in a few.