词汇 | example_english_oblige |
释义 | Examples of obligeThese examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. Fearing disqualification, competing architects feel obliged to keep closely to the brief, and their opportunity to question it is very limited. Convention and common sense dictated that potential purchasers were obliged to scrutinise the accounts of the target company. Thus, donors should not resent a lack of giving on behalf of past recipients, nor should recipients feel obliged to return benefits to a donor. I do wish publishers would stop feeling obliged to make claims which are at best over-ambitious and at worse misleading. The bill obliges physicians to report euthanasia to the prosecution, while euthanasia itself remains a criminal offence. The maid was obliging, pointing out the rooms where both men slept. Only in 1820 were the crown lawyers statutorily obliged to bring a libel information to trial within a year of the filing date. Such - mostly community-level - organisational structures have also been obliged to develop the capacity to deal with other stakeholders at the local, regional and national level. Students with grants in such schools were usually obliged to perform services in exchange, such as cleaning. Consider, for example, the fact that we are all obliged to refrain from picking our respective noses in public places. Furthermore, there are no term limits and parties are obliged to nominate incumbents desiring re-election regardless of their conduct in office. I am obliged to walk one mile, but may unselfishly walk a second. Therefore, for all practical purposes, it must be shown that religion is truth-oriented before we are obliged to examine pro-religious arguments. Again, being obliged to do it unless and until someone else does it will solve the problem only where there is perfect communication. Countries with regulations above the minimum standard are not obliged to decrease their standard levels. Usually, these strategies are chosen and enforced by high-level public entities and therefore many institutions are obliged to support them. When the singer is obliged to sustain the note and to emit it over and over again, the effect is decidedly strenuous. Architects are, however, obliged to try to understand the social and technical cultures in which they work. Even in the presence of mahram in the home, she was obliged to observe this norm. Once it is uttered, she is obliged to either keep her word or pay kaffara (compensation) if she is unable to keep it. The main body of the group of players was obliged to come to court for only five major feast days. The pipeline owner is obliged to transport the gas if the pipeline has spare capacity. In case of parallel proceedings, they may suspend or close their investigations but are not obliged to do so. While criminals have resources, their complicated legal and social position obliges them to work through other groups. By claiming that they are "obligated" to act in certain ways, officials are implying that they are not merely "obliged" to do so. The wife was delighted to give him her last ornaments, deeply obliged to have been of some use to her lord and master. The superintendents were obliged to take part in all kinds of work, inside and outside the institution. Every ablebodied man in the unit was obliged to plant 500 vines, and to sell all the produce to his landlord through the village chief. In these schools the teacher is obliged to teach music technology out of lesson time. One teacher spoke of remaining entirely silent during an hour-long lesson until the student was obliged to seek his own solutions. Developers can be obliged to have surveys and excavations carried out at their own expense in areas considered to be of archaeological interest. They were obliged to register as 'war refugees', but, unlike others in this category, they were debarred from receiving official assistance. In principle, adult (married) children were obliged to take care of their old parents. Their rural residence and agricultural production are still politically obliged. Due to the lack of control within the administration, they were not obliged to systematically report transactions to their supervisor. Second, syntax must analyse the blocks and decide what is the governing/obliging part and what is the governed/ obliged part of the whole. However, if the person is not obliged at that time under that circumstance, the act is not evil. Shopkeepers too were notorious for the ' trading lies ' their businesses obliged them to tell. They allowed retired and elderly couples or single people to vacate cottages needed for working families, without obliging them to leave the village altogether. Employers were obliged to abide by these conditions not so much for their employees' satisfaction, but because they reflected the public interest. Though this is an elementary measurement, it informs us of the nature of the operations of detection: it obliges the interior to project itself outside. Scientists write acknowledgments in their articles, and indeed are obliged to do so. Men wishing to contract a second mar riage are obliged to inform both women of their personal circumstances. He is obliged to render equally between its members. Alternatively, if the amount of work is thought excessive, the farmer will see it as a chore that he is obliged to suffer! Every composer is obliged to invent the virtual cultural world which each piece inhabits - and s/he has to do this anew for every piece. Many useful suggestions and helpful comments were proposed to us by anonymous referees-we are much obliged to their careful reading. Furthermore, over a day, the rapid growth rate of leaves could render a roost unsuitable, obliging the bats therein to move. Theoreticians who dealt with this topic in the second half of the nineteenth century found themselves obliged to choose softer forms of representation. One is then obliged to assume "constitutive factors" instead of "residual factors" and accordingly to proceed to the application of procedures that are mathematically different. Moreover, even if the consumers were not interested in the service, they were still obliged to pay for it. The barrios were also obliged to supply the necessary construction materials and pack animals to bring them into town. With men's outward migration, it was imperative that women were obliged to stay behind in the village with various moral sanctions against female mobility. However, signatures alone do not support a modular design discipline, obliging the entire structure of complex systems to be represented as single entities. Rulers were obliged to make them available to the ruled. While they could enjoy the companionship of a society, they were not obliged to take part in its meetings. However, strategy-building was the privilege of those who had land, assets or contacts ; proletarians were obliged to make do as well as they could. Both sides, lacking the military equipment to fight the war, were obliged to look for foreign support. In the third, it is still independent, but is obliged to follow the preferences imposed by the government that appoints it. Indeed, even those who question its effectiveness feel obliged to recommend it due to medicolegal concerns (10). To pay this, he has been obliged to take out a 2000 pound mortgage. His standard response was that 'in popular armies, partisan armies etc., the movement is obliged to utilise women in war also'. Interviewees may feel obliged to appear compliant and grateful, and preoccupied with their health care and morbidity. In each case the developers were obliged to make compromises which limited the value of their work. We feel obliged to identify these channels, as they should either be interrupted preoperatively, by transcatheter techniques, or at the time of surgery. The technological changes of the twentieth century obliged research institutes to rethink their role in society. Second, the effects of dismissal costs are highly sensitive to the extent to which closing establishments in particular are obliged to pay them. Their descendants were still obliged to do so. While many neo-liberals have been obliged to re-evaluate their blind faith in free markets, so have developmental state theorists had to adjust to new realities. The central actor is thus obliged to define the goal of action, delineate the ground rules of behaviour, and to design means to monitor implementation. In this difficult moment it alone remained with us and offered more than it was obliged to do. All nationalist post-revolutionaries had been obliged to address this anomaly. If obliged to teach 13-year-olds, one-third of them would prefer to teach a subject other than music. There are good reasons why we are not obliged to provide all and only treatments as opposed to enhancement. Women have a right to control their reproduction and are not obliged to have as many children as they could possibly have. Therefore, pregnant women (who intend to give birth) are morally obliged to undergo prenatal testing to select against disabilities in their potential offspring. Doctors are obliged to facilitate patients' opportunities for reflection to prevent ill-considered rational and irrational influences on choice. We were therefore obliged to wait until the end of the trial before cutting further samples from the mosquito nets. The higher the position an individual occupies, the fuller the knowledge he is obliged to have. Just as no one is obliged to commit a sin, so no one can be bound to lie. She would be obliged to evaluate the merits of particular actions solely on the basis of general considerations and the need to balance competing rights. Companies are obliged to meet half the costs of their employees' social security contributions. The children who inherited the farm often felt obliged to provide care. Women were expected to agree to these marriages because they were culturally obliged to obey the wishes of their fathers and elders in general. Thus, a layer that is capable of winner-takes-all dynamics might not be obliged to employ such dynamics at all times and in all tasks. She had been obliged to outlaw communist speakers from the section. Legally, even relatives living outside the nuclear family were obliged to support one another. As such, any philosophy worth its salt will be obliged to take it, the always possible chanciness of contingency, on board. In parishes where collection and levy predominated, the living were obliged to organise themselves into a regime of active collaboration. Whereas standards of ethical behaviour for men were essentially active, a woman was obliged above all to remain chaste. In the second instance, the needs of government had obliged them to explain a range of new policies which broke with the whig tradition. They are permanently obliged to protect themselves from rivals and justify the choices made to consumers/users. We have felt obliged to play up those special things which we alone do and to keep quiet about those which we hold in common. Each aspir-ing duty solicitor is obliged through a process of self-assessment to decide whether the requirement of" substantial criminal experience" has been satisfied. The question to be asked, therefore, is: can the nation afford to increase the resources it already feels obliged to expend on the very old? Because of this, a household obliged to sponsor many feasts gains no prestige, but becomes rather an object of pity. Once the decision has been made, he is obliged to respect it. What reasons may persuade him that he is so compelled or obliged? Furthermore, district health authorities were obliged to become traders rather than simply suppliers of hospital services. These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. |
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