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Re: Congress has enacted legislation forbidding state and local [#permalink]
andy_gr8 wrote:
C for me

forbids to is the right idiom...


Don`t you mean "forbid from?" :?
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Re: Congress has enacted legislation forbidding state and local [#permalink]
I think "forbid to" is better idiom.
B and C are very close.

I would go with C.

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Brajesh
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Re: Congress has enacted legislation forbidding state and local [#permalink]
legislations that forbids is the right one! ( i guess )

so i stick to B
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Re: Congress has enacted legislation forbidding state and local [#permalink]
C because the three years has to be next to the government forbidding.. A sounds like for three years consumers to be linked to internet..
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Re: Congress has enacted legislation forbidding state and local [#permalink]
GMATT73 wrote:
andy_gr8 wrote:
C for me

forbids to is the right idiom...


Don`t you mean "forbid from?" :?


These idioms would kill me...All sound so similar..I checked my list and there it says "forbid to" is the right idiom... but i wudnt be surpirsed if a new exception comes up .
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Re: Congress has enacted legislation forbidding state and local [#permalink]
C for me..

1. doesnt distort the meaning
2. uses the right idion (forbid..to)
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Re: Congress has enacted legislation forbidding state and local [#permalink]
The OA is C



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Re: Congress has enacted legislation forbidding state and local [#permalink]
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