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stkroot
What's the difference between 'prohibit' and 'inhibit'?
10 de ene. de 2012 11:45
Respuestas · 5
4
They are both the opposite of allow, but slightly different:
prohibit to make impossible, or stop, the opposite of favour
inhibit to restrict or help prevent, the opposite of aid, assist, help
It is prohibited to smoke indoors in a public place in the UK. (It is against the law to do so)
inhibit
The UK parliament decided to prohibit people from smoking indoors in public places.
the use of chemicals can inhibit mold growth (chemicals can prevent mold from growing/make it grow less quickly)
10 de enero de 2012
3
basically they both mean the same thing : to forbid or prevent some action but prohibit is often used with the sense that some authority (outside force) is forbidding it and inhibit (force inside the individual) is often used with the sense that psychological or social forces are doing the forbidding.
examples
In America the Prohibition was a law passed in 1920 that prohibited the sale of liquor and other alcoholic beverages.
social inhibition: Imagine this You are waiting in a line at the cashier in a store and someone jumps in front of you. Now what stops you from hitting him over the head with your bag or shouting? Sure some people would do this
but others would be inhibited (prevented) from doing this
because they do not want to appear crazy or violent by others in the store so they passively remain quiet.
hope this helps!
John
10 de enero de 2012
Prohibit means the same as "deny" while inhibit means the same as 'allow"
10 de enero de 2012
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stkroot
Competencias lingüísticas
Chino (mandarín), Inglés
Idioma de aprendizaje
Inglés
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