B2 Collocation Formell 2 Min. Lesezeit

grant permission

Allow formally

Use this phrase for official, professional, or legal approvals to sound authoritative and clear.

In 15 Sekunden

  • An official way to say someone allowed a specific action.
  • Used when there is a clear authority or legal context.
  • Sounds more serious and professional than the word 'allow'.

Bedeutung

This is a fancy way of saying someone in power officially said 'yes' to a request. It sounds more serious than just saying 'let' or 'allow'.

Wichtige Beispiele

3 von 6
1

Requesting a day off

My manager finally granted permission for my vacation in July.

My manager finally allowed my vacation in July.

💼
2

A city council meeting

The council granted permission to build the new park.

The council gave official approval for the park.

👔
3

Texting a friend (jokingly)

I grant you permission to eat the last slice of pizza.

You can eat the last pizza slice.

😄
🌍

Kultureller Hintergrund

This phrase has roots in old English law where 'grants' were land or titles given by a monarch. Today, it reflects the Western emphasis on formal consent and the legalistic nature of professional interactions. It is the verbal equivalent of a rubber stamp on a document.

💡

The Passive Voice Trick

In reports, use 'Permission was granted' to sound more objective and professional.

⚠️

Don't Overuse It

If you use this for every 'yes', you will sound like a 19th-century lawyer. Use 'let' for friends!

In 15 Sekunden

  • An official way to say someone allowed a specific action.
  • Used when there is a clear authority or legal context.
  • Sounds more serious and professional than the word 'allow'.

What It Means

Grant permission is a heavy-duty way to say 'yes'. Imagine a king nodding his head or a boss signing a document. To grant means to give something valuable. Permission is the right to do something. Together, they mean an official green light has been given. It is not just a casual 'sure' between friends. It feels official and final.

How To Use It

You use this phrase when there is a clear hierarchy. One person has the power, and the other person is asking. You usually see it in the passive voice too. For example, 'Permission was granted.' You can use it for big things like building a house. You can also use it for smaller things like leaving work early. Just remember it sounds a bit like a movie script or a legal paper.

When To Use It

Use it in professional emails or when talking to authorities. It is perfect for HR departments or government offices. Use it when you want to sound respectful and serious. If you are writing a formal letter, this is your best friend. It also works well in news reports. 'The city granted permission for the parade' sounds much better than 'The city said okay'.

When NOT To Use It

Do not use this with your best friend at a bar. If they ask to borrow five dollars, don't say 'I grant you permission'. You will sound like a robot or a very strange wizard. Avoid it in casual texts unless you are being funny. It is too stiff for a romantic date. Keep it out of relaxed family dinners unless you want your siblings to roll their eyes.

Cultural Background

In English-speaking cultures, bureaucracy loves this phrase. It comes from a history of legal and royal language. In the US and UK, 'rights' and 'permissions' are taken very seriously. The word grant implies that the person giving it has the authority. It reflects a society that values clear rules and official procedures. It’s the language of the 'system'.

Common Variations

You might hear refuse permission if the answer is no. Another common one is seek permission, which means you are looking for it. Sometimes people say give permission, which is slightly more relaxed. In very high-level legal talk, you might hear accord permission. But grant permission remains the gold standard for formal agreement.

Nutzungshinweise

This is a high-register collocation. It is best reserved for situations where there is an official request and a formal response.

💡

The Passive Voice Trick

In reports, use 'Permission was granted' to sound more objective and professional.

⚠️

Don't Overuse It

If you use this for every 'yes', you will sound like a 19th-century lawyer. Use 'let' for friends!

💬

The 'Power' Dynamic

Using this phrase subtly signals that you are the one in charge. Use it carefully to avoid sounding arrogant.

Beispiele

6
#1 Requesting a day off
💼

My manager finally granted permission for my vacation in July.

My manager finally allowed my vacation in July.

Shows a professional hierarchy between employee and boss.

#2 A city council meeting
👔

The council granted permission to build the new park.

The council gave official approval for the park.

Used for public or governmental decisions.

#3 Texting a friend (jokingly)
😄

I grant you permission to eat the last slice of pizza.

You can eat the last pizza slice.

Using formal language in a casual setting for humor.

#4 A child asking a parent
🤝

Her parents granted permission for her to stay out late.

Her parents said she could stay out late.

Sounds a bit more serious than 'let her'.

#5 A historical documentary
👔

The King refused to grant permission for the voyage.

The King said no to the trip.

Fits perfectly in historical or royal contexts.

#6 A difficult conversation
💭

I cannot grant permission for you to use my car again.

I won't let you use my car anymore.

The formality adds a sense of strict boundaries.

Teste dich selbst

Choose the most appropriate word to complete the formal sentence.

The principal has ___ permission for the students to host a bake sale.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: granted

`Granted` is the standard verb paired with `permission` in formal settings.

Complete the sentence to express an official denial.

The government refused to ___ permission for the protest.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: grant

`Refused to grant permission` is the most common formal way to say 'said no'.

🎉 Ergebnis: /2

Visuelle Lernhilfen

Formality of 'Allowing'

Casual

Let / Say okay

Let me go.

Neutral

Allow / Give the go-ahead

They allowed the change.

Formal

Grant permission

The board granted permission.

When to Grant Permission

Grant Permission
💼

Workplace

Approving a budget

⚖️

Legal

Court orders

🎓

Education

Research ethics

😜

Sarcasm

Teasing a sibling

Häufig gestellte Fragen

10 Fragen

No, but it is for official things. You can use it in office emails like The director granted permission for the project.

Yes, give permission is more common in daily speech. Grant is just the 'fancy' version.

Both work! Use to with a verb (to go) and for with a noun (for the trip).

The word grant implies a gift or a favor from someone in a high position. It carries a lot of weight.

Only if you are being funny or very formal. For example, I grant you permission to be late!

The opposite is refuse permission or deny permission. Both are also very formal.

Yes, it is used in all major English dialects, especially in legal and official documents.

Yes! You often see this in software settings, like Grant permission for this app to use your camera.

Mostly, but granting feels like a one-time official decision, while allowing can be a general rule.

It might be too formal. Instead of saying 'My boss granted me permission to lead', say 'I was given the opportunity to lead'.

Verwandte Redewendungen

Give the green light

Authorize

Give the go-ahead

Sanction

Consent to

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