词汇 | example_english_self-imposed |
释义 | Examples of self-imposedThese 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. Social constructionism correctly recognises the contingent character of capitalism, but maintains self-imposed limits on its sometimes useful insights. For me, a young scholar chafing under self-imposed limitations, he offered a model of the maturing and transforming senior scholar. But it is through these self-imposed limitations that the two works achieve, each in their own way, an intense lucidity. Furthermore, insofar as socializing with peers is particularly reinforcing to school-age children, isolation, even self-imposed, might give rise to internalizing problems such as depression. Their subordinates' self-imposed suppression of the urge to usurp power would serve them well. This self-imposed restriction has been very productive, as the history of the discipline amply shows. Chapter 9, which deals with education, seems to make it clear that problems of poor education are in part self-imposed. This self-imposed rigor foregrounds the problem of the spectator's professional identity. Many significant feminist (and anti-feminist) texts of this period stress women's responsibility (or inability) to overcome their weaknesses and self-imposed constraints. The reason for this is partly the authors' self-imposed discipline of restricting the literature they use to, largely, pre-1999 articles in public policy journals. A self-imposed submission to a technological imperative in terms of neglected responsibility can be extremely dangerous. In turn, a whole new set of public buildings were built, designed to represent the city's self-imposed role as the 'base of the southern advance'. This self-imposed time limit would ensure that the venture didn't outlive its artistic vitality (implying of course that it might carry on longer if successful). Brief imprisonment was followed by a long period of self-imposed exile which ended only with the outbreak of revolutionary disturbances in 1848. I have, then, discharged the first of my self-imposed obligations. Yet even the index confirms the self-imposed blind-spot. The phenomenological necessity to end-run contingency, to remove the historical from history, is a self-imposed blind spot. Of particular importance to an agent's moral and legal responsibility is the agent's pattern of response to reasons, particularly when that pattern is self-imposed. The self-imposed challenge for avant-garde architects of the late 1950s was to achieve an integrated handling of large building complexes. In some cases the isolation was self-imposed, and other times it was a consequence of social abandonment. Our capacity continuously to create solutions to the self-imposed problems caused by our niche construction reflects the fact that humans are very adaptable creatures. During war, they are often religious pacifists who pursue a self-imposed obligation to "bear witness" to a nonviolent way of life. So, the guilt complex is mainly a private, self-imposed state. What draws the eponymous character out of his self-imposed isolation is a pastoral play staged for his benefit. 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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