Consequently, some areas of town are isolated, and thus confine their residents to staying close to home. |
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I propose to confine my comments to matters of general policy within the Club. |
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These days, most scholars confine their researches to a narrow stretch of time and space. |
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Then the Alien Enemies Act gave the president the authority to confine or deport aliens of an enemy country during a state of war. |
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Yet even the members of this excellent Cambridge team sometimes fail to confine themselves within the narrow bounds of testimony. |
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In general I confine myself to extra satsumas and nuts, although I do find it difficult to resist those giant chocolate Brazils. |
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Some would argue that historians are not supposed to make history, that they should confine themselves to writing it. |
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He explained that if you catch a small shark and confine it, it will stay a size proportionate to the aquarium. |
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Like tokamaks, their currently more advanced cousins, stellarators use magnetic fields to confine plasma in a torus for fusion reactions. |
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Most states with three strikes legislation confine it to serious violent crime. |
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I shall confine myself to telling you about that Saturday she did our hair. |
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I was a rock climber and mountaineer, although I now confine myself to fell walking. |
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I must confine my writing to the inside, enclose it within a perimeter, which forms a circular line, an orbit around the text. |
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In this sense, popular culture functions as a trap to confine the imagination to stereotypical images of Indian people. |
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The public cannot be expected to confine its scrutiny of the Utah legal profession to the fortuities of state boundaries. |
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Since no strong theoretical reason exists to confine the analysis to geodesics, Stephenson and Zelen's measure might be preferable. |
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If the outdoors is too dangerous, ailurophiles often forgo feline companionship rather than confine a cat indoors. |
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The flight lasted eight hours, and the sick crew managed to confine their sickness and diarrhoeal episodes to the plane's toilets. |
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In order to tailor each course to your company's requirements, we plan to confine group sizes to between four and twelve participants. |
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We can look at the whole sweep of history and not just the narrow corner that some partisans wish to confine us to. |
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The diseases can damage the brain, heart, liver, kidney and skeletal muscles and confine sufferers to a wheelchair. |
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What sort of a penal system do we have when those who are supposed to confine the prisoners cannot or do not protect them? |
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In contrast, Bermuda's papers almost never do, preferring to confine the foreign news deep inside the paper. |
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Maybe that's why when we reach a certain age, we're supposed to confine such extravagances to birthdays, weddings and Christmas. |
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I will confine myself to saying that this highly praised movie is Marxist dreck. |
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And in no way feel constrained if interest or circumstances confine your study to your local area. |
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Here, we shall confine our attention to discussing the conditions which must be satisfied if their occurrence is to be compulsory. |
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Normally they confine themselves to outhouses, sheds and garages but sometimes go up market and enter houses in search of a bit luxury. |
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I shall therefore confine myself to setting out, with pagination, the passages which he contends are libellous of him. |
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In subsequent years, Givon would confine her efforts to the main gallery spaces in the Monument. |
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Political abuse in Maine invited the Dutch king to confine his activities to dykes and polders and abstain from pronouncing upon mountain ridges. |
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I tried to confine my map-reading to traffic lights and stop signs, I really did. |
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Then, by applying an electric field perpendicular to these layers, you create a potential well which can confine electrons along this perpendicular direction. |
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If you are moving house, put your cat in a cattery during the move and then initially confine it to a small area of the house to make it feel secure. |
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Inside psychiatric hospitals, the schizophrenic architect is forced to confine his dreams to paper, or to minor alterations of his personal environment. |
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Some people have an extreme fear condition called agoraphobia, and confine themselves to the home or other familiar places where they feel relatively safe. |
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But even in the tiniest detail, in apparently offhand remarks, there is a sense of his determination to confine himself to a list of terse, pre-scripted lines. |
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The attempts by some shortsighted commanders to confine themselves to training and to leave education to officers of educational structures have met with a resolute rebuff. |
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It seems that despite the popular myth, according to the 500,000 seamen's records held at Kew, sailors tended to confine their body art mainly to their forearms. |
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By contrast Italian churches had tended to confine tomb monuments to the peripheries, with the wall tomb the most prestigious form of church burial. |
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In war, for instance, we certainly mean to confine our aspirations for life to ourselves and our allies. |
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Magnets are arranged with opposite poles to confine the particle beam. |
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For a primary but still integrated judgment of the validity of the belief system theory it is most suitable to confine oneself to the field of research named political socialization. |
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The eggplant flea beetle, Epitrix fuscula, doesn't confine its predations to eggplants. |
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As labor has become more medicalized, so have unnatural birthing positions that confine women to beds. |
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They may blind us and arbitrarily, dogmatically, or unphilosophically confine our thinking. |
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There are several ways to confine excitons in semiconductors, resulting in different methods to produce quantum dots. |
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While some lists and clan maps confine their area to the Highlands, others also show Lowland clans or families. |
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Civil war broke out almost immediately, with the royalists again able to confine the reformist army in London. |
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Why should we confine a body of men to making laws, when so many of them might be more usefully employed in wheeling barrows? |
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False imprisonment is the intent to confine or bound someone without a means of egress. |
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He is to confine himself to the compass of numbers and the slavery of rhyme. |
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These questions simply will not confine themselves to quiet rooms. |
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It is the malpractice of the courts to confine evidence and discussion to the bounds of apparent relevancy. |
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For now, the ANDi scientists say they'll confine their genetic monkeying around to monkeys. |
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When Laird breaks free from the tercets, couplets, and symmetrical stanza shapes which seem to confine him, the thinking and saying start to sharpen. |
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During this time the use of opium had little negative connotation and was used freely until 1882 when a law was passed to confine opium smoking to specific dens. |
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But more usually we confine ourselves to a less spacious field. |
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It is true there are cases in which, if we confine ourselves to the effects of the first order, the good will have an incontestable preponderance over the evil. |
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In legal terms, they refer to restrictions or boundaries, and Islam's Shariah imposes certain additional hudud on believers that confine our actions to a certain sphere. |
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Eliot did not, however, confine herself to her bucolic roots. |
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Instead, he urged that people confine their fruit intake to meal times to protect their tooth enamel from constant wear and give them time to recover. |
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David Barlett, of King's College London, warned people to confine their fruit intake to meal times to protect their tooth enamel from the acidity caused by the food. |
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The rains are the best, and, indeed, the only manure in this island, and they confine their course to the forests, leaving unbedewed the tracts that are cleared. |
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A spinal cord injury will confine him to a wheelchair for life.... He has a service dog and lives alone in a one-bedroom apartment, although there are relatives nearby. |
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