Englishfor English speakers
permissible
—
adjective
that may be permitted especially as according to rule
permissible behavior in school
a permissible tax deduction
—
adjective
that may be accepted or conceded
a kind of speculation that was permissible in cosmology but inadmissible in medicine
over
Preposition
—
Something is over when it has finished, usually referring to an event.
When the movie was over we left the movie theater.
—
In a location above something.
He stepped over the dog.
—
From one side to the other.
They went over the bridge.
—
If you invite someone over, you invite them to your house.
They had him over for tea.
—
A number divided by another.
Eight over two is four.
over
Noun
—
An over in a cricket match is six balls bowled from one end.
The captain told me I would have to bowl the next over.
load
Noun
—
A load is something carried, often something heavy.
The truck arrived with a load of dog food.
You've got quite a load. Let me help you carry it.
The ship won't leave until it has a full load of oil.
—
Loads/a load of something is a lot of it.
We've had a load of problems ever since we got the new stuff.
It costs loads of money.
—
Your load is how much work you have.
We hired another person to spread the load a bit more.
Teachers are asking for a lower teaching load.
—
Load is the amount electrical power produced.
load
Verb
—
If you load mathx/math on mathy/math, you put mathx/math on mathy/math to be carried. Usually there is a lot of mathx/math, and/or it is heavy.
We loaded the boxes on the truck and set off for Vancouver.
After loading up the horses, we got on and headed north.
The waiter loaded all the food onto a tray and carried it out.
—
If you load a machine, you put in supplies that the machine uses.
He loaded the gun, brought it up, and shot the deer in one continuous motion.
All the software has been loaded onto the computer.