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Allows

Allows is the third-person singular present tense of the verb allow. Its primary senses are to grant permission for someone to do something and to make something possible or feasible. Grammatically, allow is transitive and usually takes a direct object that denotes what is permitted, or an infinitive clause (for example, "allows you to edit"), or a prepositional phrase such as "allows for" that indicates accommodation or consideration of factors.

Etymology: The word originates in Middle English via Old French alouer, from Latin allocare or allouare, meaning

Usage and nuance: "Allows" is common in policy, legal, and technical writing to indicate permission or capability.

Notes: In computing and interface design, "allows" often signals that a feature or setting makes a task

to
place
at
disposal
or
to
allot.
It
can
express
permission
("The
contract
allows
access
to
the
data")
or
enablement
("The
device
allows
users
to
customize
settings").
The
phrase
"allow
for"
means
to
take
into
account
or
provide
for.
Related
forms
include
allow
(base
form),
allowed
(past),
allowing
(present
participle),
and
related
nouns
such
as
allowance
and
allowable.
Synonyms
include
permit,
enable,
authorize;
antonyms
include
prohibit,
forbid,
disallow.
possible.
In
everyday
language,
it
is
slightly
more
formal
than
"let"
when
referring
to
permission.