forbid sb to do sth, prescribe sth for sb
RON大神 * "forbid ... to" is more or less universally preferred to "forbid ... from" in formal written english, so i would assume that the gmat will follow the same preference. a couple of other points: * "prescribe drugs for their patients" is much better than "prescribe their patients drugs" (which would be fine in spoken language, but is at best awkward and at worst ambiguous when writ
* "forbid ... to" is more or less universally preferred to "forbid ... from" in formal written english, so i would assume that the gmat will follow the same preference. a couple of other points: * "prescribe drugs for their patients" is much better than "prescribe their patients drugs" (which would be fine in spoken language, but is at best awkward and at worst ambiguous when writ
forbid to do sth; prescribe drugs to/for their patients
forbid somebody to do something比 prohibit somebody from doing something更正式。 prescribe somebody something不如prescribe something for somebody/something清晰。
RON大神 * "forbid ... to" is more or less universally preferred to "forbid ... from" in formal written english, so i would assume that the gmat will follow the same preference. a couple of other points: * "prescribe drugs for their patients" is much better than "prescribe their patients drugs" (which would be fine in spoken language, but is at best awkward and at worst ambiguous when writ
be forbidden to do
forbid somebody to do something, prohibit somebody from doing something
forbid from X forbid to V prescribe drugs fro their patients
做题时,纠结historically的位置是否影响句子表达,这是不必要的浪费时间,考点不在这里。这题的考点是习语forbid sb to do sth
forbid to do sth prohibit from doing sth
forbid somebody to do something, prohibit somebody from doing something为正确的习语
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