From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishdisallowdis‧al‧low /ˌdɪsəˈlaʊ/ verb [transitive] DSFORBIDto officially refuse to accept something, because a rule has been broken OPP allow Manchester United had a goal disallowed.► see thesaurus at refuse→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
disallow• Home striker Paul Crimmen let them off the hook on a number of occasions and Horsham had two goals disallowed.• It cost £639, expenditure which the district auditor disallowed.• Peacock had the ball in the net after 65 minutes but the effort was disallowed.• We would disallow any involving the mediation of language, including, of course, the belief that it believes.• Judge Nisen disallowed certain evidence containing confidential information.• The court confirmed a 1989 federal ruling disallowing legal action against the logging brought on environmental grounds.• These will eventually be disallowed on taxation.• As is indicated above the judge must specify the sum to be disallowed or ordered.• You always hear of the 2 goals they had disallowed ... so!?From Longman Business Dictionarydisallowdis‧al‧low /ˌdɪsəˈlaʊ/ verb [transitive] to officially refuse to allow or accept somethingThe court will examine the costs and expenses sought and disallow those that it considers have not been ‘properly incurred’.→ See Verb table