Synonyms for visa


Grammar : Noun
Spell : vee-zuh
Phonetic Transcription : ˈvi zə

Top 10 synonyms for visa Other synonyms for the word visa

Définition of visa

Origin :
  • 1831, "official signature or endorsement on a passport," from French visa, from Modern Latin charta visa "verified paper," literally "paper that has been seen," from fem. past participle of Latin videre "to see" (see vision). Earlier visé (1810), from French past participle of viser "to examine, view."
  • As in paper/papers : noun legal document
  • As in pass : noun authorization, permission
  • As in passage : noun authorization; enactment
  • As in passport : noun identification of origin, country
  • As in permit : noun authorization
  • As in papers : noun document
  • As in validation : noun confirmation
  • As in confirmation : noun ratification, validation, proof
  • As in green card : noun working card
Example sentences :
  • "Morlache's old gray is a passport that requires no visa," said D'Esmonde.
  • Extract from : « The Daltons, Volume II (of II) » by Charles James Lever
  • Apparently it mattered not, for the visa was made out and stamped.
  • Extract from : « A July Holiday in Saxony, Bohemia, and Silesia » by Walter White
  • But in addition to requiring a visa, my sister wants a new passport.
  • Extract from : « Sylvia & Michael » by Compton Mackenzie
  • Then he must go round to the Czecho-Slovak office for a Czechoslovak visa.
  • Extract from : « The Salvaging Of Civilisation » by H. G. (Herbert George) Wells
  • So I advised him to get a visa from King Nicholas and to come back to perform his mission, when that visa would be honoured.
  • Extract from : « The Birth of Yugoslavia, Volume 2 » by Henry Baerlein
  • If he has, check the foreign consuls here in the city to see if he got a visa.
  • Extract from : « Nor Iron Bars a Cage.... » by Gordon Randall Garrett
  • In MÅ“so-Gothic it is inflected throughout with -s; as visa, vas, vsum, visans.
  • Extract from : « The English Language » by Robert Gordon Latham
  • I then went to the French ambassador who put his visa on my passport, and I was ready to go by way of France.
  • Extract from : « Thirty Days in Lithuania in 1919 » by Peter P. Saurusaitis
  • Before embarking at a foreign port, your passport must receive the visa of the Spanish consul.
  • Extract from : « Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 69, No. 427, May, 1851 » by Various
  • The only visa it bore was that of the American Embassy in London, dated two days previously.
  • Extract from : « The Man with the Clubfoot » by Valentine Williams

Antonyms for visa

Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019