approve
approve — verb
1. to give official permission or formal agreement for a plan, request, document, o
to give official permission or formal agreement for a plan, request, document, or product, so that it can move forward or be used.
The city council approved the new park near Maple Street last Tuesday.
approve + concrete proposal noun
Mrs. Lin's bank loan was approved within three working days.
passive: be approved (formal contexts)
The doctor said this medicine has been approved for children over six.
Ravi hopes the team will approve his idea at tomorrow's meeting.
The government quickly approved the budget for the typhoon relief work.
文法句型
approve + noun (plan, request, budget, drug)
用法筆記
Subject is usually an institution, committee, or person with authority (a board, a manager, a court). The object is a thing being permitted (plan, loan, budget, drug). Distinguish from sense 2: this sense never takes 'of' before its object.
常見錯誤
2. to feel that someone or something is good, right, or suitable, often in a person
to feel that someone or something is good, right, or suitable, often in a personal or moral way; used with 'of' before the thing or person you have a good feeling about.
Olu's parents do not approve of her boyfriend's loud motorcycle.
approve of + noun (personal opinion)
Most teachers approve of giving students short breaks during long classes.
approve of + -ing (gerund)
Aunt Rosa nodded slowly, showing she approved of the wedding plans.
I don't approve of children watching scary films before bedtime.
Many neighbours approved of the quiet new family on the third floor.
- support
broader; can include active help, not just feeling
- favour
prefer one option over another; less moral tone
- agree with
informal; for ideas or actions you think are right
- disapprove of
direct opposite; same grammar with 'of'
- object to
stronger; usually voiced openly
文法句型
approve of + noun / -ing
用法筆記
Always followed by 'of' plus a noun or -ing form; never takes a direct object. Distinguish from sense 1: this sense is about a personal feeling or moral judgement, not official power, so it cannot replace sense 1 in a sentence like 'The board approved the budget.'