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词汇 restrictive
释义 restrictive
adjective
 often disapprovinguk /rɪˈstrɪk.tɪv/ us /rɪˈstrɪk.tɪv/
C2
limiting the freedom of someone or preventing something from growing: 限制性的;约束性的
He is self-employed because he finds working for other people too restrictive.他是个自由职业者,因为他觉得在别人手下工作太不自由。
The college is not able to expand because of restrictive planning laws.由于限制性规划法规,这所大学无法扩建。
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

Limiting and restricting
anti-libertarian
armlock
boundary
box someone out
box someone/something in
crippling
cripplingly
crowd
curb
curtail
keep (herself) to herselfidiom
keep something down
limit
limitation
limitative
suffocatingly
tempered
tie someone down
tie someone up
uncrippled

restrictive | Business English


restrictive
adjective
uk /rɪˈstrɪktɪv/us
limiting the freedom of someone or preventing something from growing or developing:
restrictive laws/measures/policiesThrough introducing restrictive measures like anti-takeover legislation, corporate executives bolstered their own positions.
restrictive conditions/effects/rulesHe wants to transfer to a personal pension plan, which has less restrictive conditions than an occupational plan.
restrictive conditions/effects/rulesHe considers that French labour laws are far too restrictive.

Examples of restrictive


restrictive
These may be due to extrinsic constraints that are too restrictive or assembly designs that are physically impossible.
However, there are good theoretical and empirical reasons to believe that the linearity property of the equilibrium correction is too restrictive.
This assumption can be restrictive in many real world classification tasks.
At the same time, limiting references to closed code types is too restrictive because it disallows references to functions.
In this section, we will look at several cross-subsidy definitions, beginning with the most general and moving towards the most restrictive.
The standard restrictive argument proceeds from the premise that the life of human individuals is intrinsically valuable at all stages of life.
Another possible reason for the apparent low mobility might be that before 2002 the portability and vesting rules had been more restrictive and more complex.
They were fairly evenly divided over whether it led them to organise their ideas more effectively and whether the screen size is restrictive.
What made the middle 1990s different was the 'work first' strategy adopted by several states and more restrictive public assistance guidelines.
The courts later adopted a less restrictive concept of locality, recognising that settlements might embrace more than one parish.
Yet practitioners often encounter restrictive practice guidelines promulgated by managed care entities that run counter to this basic assumption.
Restrictive methods are not necessary; we must use methods that propose, that favour particular projects that are offered to public and private operators.
For computational induction, however, a more restrictive class of predicates is needed, namely admissible predicates.
Xue et al. (1993) also pointed out that the frequently used analytical approach mentioned above is too restrictive.
They conclude, however, that the adjustment speeds may be different and suggest that less restrictive models may give more informative estimates.
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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