permit+to+enter

  • 21Frontier Closed Area — Coordinates: 22°32′N 114°06′E / 22.53°N 114.1°E / 22.53; 114.1 …

    Wikipedia

  • 22Mount Everest — Everest redirects here. For other uses, see Everest (disambiguation). Mount Everest (Qomolongma / Sagarmatha) Highest Mountain in the World …

    Wikipedia

  • 23allow — al·low /ə lau̇/ vt: to give approval of or permission for: as a: to grant fulfillment of allow ed her petition for relief b: to decide in favor of allow a deduction on a tax return c: to permit to be presented …

    Law dictionary

  • 24Nirjuli —   town   …

    Wikipedia

  • 25tolerate — I verb abide, accept, acquiesce, allow, be lenient, bear, bear with, brook, carry on, consent, endure, forbear, indulge, make the best of, oblige, permit, put up with, receive, sanction, stand, stomach, submit to, suffer, swallow, take patiently …

    Law dictionary

  • 26take — takable, takeable, adj. taker, n. /tayk/, v., took, taken, taking, n. v.t. 1. to get into one s hold or possession by voluntary action: to take a cigarette out of a box; to take a pen and begin to write. 2. to hold, grasp, or grip: to take a book …

    Universalium

  • 27accept — ac·cept /ik sept, ak / vt 1 a: to receive with consent accept a gift accept service b: to assent to the receipt of and treat in such a way as to indicate ownership of accept ed the shipment despite discovering defects in the merchandise compare …

    Law dictionary

  • 28December 2010 — was the twelfth month of that year. It began on a Wednesday and ended after 31 days on a Friday. Portal:Current events This is an archived version of Wikipedia s Current events Portal from December 2010 …

    Wikipedia

  • 29admit — [ad mit′, ədmit′] vt. admitted, admitting [ME admitten < L admittere < ad , to + mittere, to send: see MISSION] 1. to permit to enter or use; let in 2. to entitle to enter [this ticket admits two] 3. to allow; leave room for 4 …

    English World dictionary

  • 30WARSAW — (Pol. Warszawa), originally capital of the Masovia region; from the 16th century, capital of Poland. Jews were apparently living in Warsaw by the end of the 14th century, but the first explicit information on Jewish settlement dates from 1414. In …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism