Used in a Sentence

authorises

Definition, parts of speech, synonyms, and sentence examples for authorises.

Editorial note

One is electronic, the second is a paper print-out of the touch-screen ballot, which the voter reviews, authorises, then places in a locked ballot-box.

Examples16
Definitions1
Parts of speech1

Quick take

Non-Oxford British English standard spelling of authorize. [(transitive) To grant (someone) the permission or power necessary to do (something); to permit; to sanction or consent to.]

Meaning at a glance

The clearest senses and uses of authorises gathered in one view.

verb

Non-Oxford British English standard spelling of authorize. [(transitive) To grant (someone) the permission or power necessary to do (something); to permit; to sanction or consent to.]

Definitions

Core meanings and parts of speech for authorises.

verb

Non-Oxford British English standard spelling of authorize. [(transitive) To grant (someone) the permission or power necessary to do (something); to permit; to sanction or consent to.]

Example sentences

1

One is electronic, the second is a paper print-out of the touch-screen ballot, which the voter reviews, authorises, then places in a locked ballot-box.

2

It sends an automatic email to the List-Unsubscribe address, which if implemented correctly per the spec/regulations, authorises an immediate unsubscribe.

3

As in the law authorises anyone to access anything just by virtue of being contracted to move it, not even ownership?

4

That’s why they designed it so Congress controls the purse strings and authorises military spending only for 2 years at a time.

5

It's gonna be a lot of fun when the master keys leak and someone writes a fake server that just authorises every game.

6

No power is provided until negotiation using the signalling authorises the power transfer.

7

You don't suddenly get some kind of authentication pop up, and know to enter a particular code that authorises anything that isn't your password.

8

Patriot Act, which authorises the security services to access any computerised data held by individuals and businesses, without obtaining prior authorisation and without informing users.

9

It legally authorises you to perform specific activity within specific timeframe.

10

Even when a specific department of the Mint authorises something, it'll have to pass through about six other departments before a blog post is signed off.

11

User logs in first, authorises an app to get a specific claim a specific period or amount of times, User logs in to the app, app calls the API.

12

Yup - the hole turned me off so much I've switched my first EV buy to Hyundai ioniq 5 (N if my wife authorises it LOL)...

Quote examples

1

Section 46(1) authorises the use by police of "such assistants as may be reasonable in the circumstances for the purpose of the entry and search.

2

A little investigation reveals that section 14 of the Federal Reserve Act authorises the Fed "To buy and sell, at home or abroad, bonds and notes of the United States".

3

It's not something that needs a lot of thought if you consider that the current president allegedly personally authorises deadly drone strikes even on american citizens (on "Terror Tuesdays"), while Nixon had to resign over Watergate.

4

It won't be a full-blown Hackney license, Hackney licensing is because unlike these "ride sharing" apps and what the UK would call a "mini cab" service, which require only a "public hire" license - the Hackney license authorises you to literally pick up strangers on the street, which was of course a completely normal way to use a taxi in a major city decades ago and is still somewhat common at say airports.

Frequently asked questions

Short answers drawn from the clearest meanings and examples for this word.

How do you use authorises in a sentence?

One is electronic, the second is a paper print-out of the touch-screen ballot, which the voter reviews, authorises, then places in a locked ballot-box.

What does authorises mean?

Non-Oxford British English standard spelling of authorize. [(transitive) To grant (someone) the permission or power necessary to do (something); to permit; to sanction or consent to.]

What part of speech is authorises?

authorises is commonly used as verb.