词汇 | example_english_circumscribe |
释义 | Examples of circumscribeThese 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. All we need is a minimally circumscribed concept that will help us explain the law in particular. The authors find the use of 'indigenous' not sufficiently circumscribed for legal discussions. Additionally, they aren't ready to comprehend being circumscribed or restricted. We divided each grid into contiguous 100-m2 areas circumscribed by the four trap stations at the corners. Without the rights and liberties associated with democratic governance, the kinds of demands associated with more open forms of government are circumscribed. In the centre of the downwind screen was a round hole circumscribed by a mounting ring to hold a releasing cage. The concept of heritability is circumscribed in several ways. The possibility of on-line bilingualism would then be circumscribed by the notion of what can be instantaneously combined. On the cross section, the whitish tumor in the left ventricle is firm, well circumscribed, and trabeculated. The design task cannot be circumscribed simply, if at all, with all the relevant inputs and outputs identified. In others, her agency was circumscribed and ambiguous at best. Two additional changes in the social relations of the workplace in the first decades of the twentieth century further circumscribed the jobber's power. Their influence with the workers declined as the patronage they once commanded was circumscribed, while tensions and conflict in the workplace deepened. Do we mind that he thus muffles its voice, literally circumscribes it? The prevalence and predictive value of mild impairment or circumscribed deficits have been the subject of several enquiries. The women argued, therefore, that their reproductive choice was being circumscribed, by statute, in a way that the reproductive choice of fertile women was not. She is especially interested in advice literature, a genre that "comprised the bulk of what girls read, in educations that were vastly circumscribed" (186). By the 16th century, the northern form -s, circumscribed to third-person-singular contexts only, was the main inflection used. However, the comprehensive hegemonic ambition and authoritarian rule of colonialism circumscribed political rights and left little space for autonomous action. In such suitably circumscribed settings, a carefully and modestly selected set of indicators (not yet another "comprehensive" yet unfeasible wish list) could be created. The duties of home helps and community nurses are also heavily circumscribed. Moreover, the aspect of an interlocutor's knowledge that has to be monitored can often be circumscribed by goal structures. However, the reality is that control over sandalwood remains heavily circumscribed by attendant regulatory requirements concerning the management and sale of the commodity. Other case reports describe patients with highly circumscribed deficits that seemingly affect a single category of objects or a small number of categories. Even when circumscribing decentralisation in this way, there are many areas in which central governments can devolve power. One is, of course, an assumption of the extent to which the denotations of musical sounds are historically and culturally circumscribed. Although the chief of government is constitutionally entitled to set the ' 'guiding principles of policy' ', this competence is in practice closely circumscribed. Her assumption of male characteristics was also circumscribed. The soundscape composition is the journey that circumscribes the relationship, the conversation between composer and sound sources. People do have autonomy, but it is always circumscribed. Taine's interests were relatively circumscribed in his youth. Indeed, secular gains and constitutional equality have often been circumscribed and undermined by customs and traditions. Patients meeting criteria for anxiety disorders were excluded where depersonalization was found to be circumscribed to panic attacks or other episodes of intense anxiety. Similarly, formal services available to the older people are circumscribed, both in variety and range. There are, of course, male careworkers (and nurses) but they are in the minority and their practice is circumscribed. Dominant groups or powers thus restrict minorities by speaking both about and for them, circumscribing their rights or potential to define themselves. Moreover, the customary right to transfer one-tenth of the inherited property was considerably circumscribed. The subject matter of this book is relatively nar row and clearly circumscribed, but it is covered in quasi-monographic form. She strongly suggests that "circumscribing the variable context" of the linguistic variable be both a starting point and ending point in variationist analysis. Financial information today is limited and circumscribed as well as being planetary. Similarly, the soundscape composition is the journey that circumscribes the relationship, the conversation between composer and sound sources. Although intellectual property rights legislation and patents have increasingly circumscribed the use of farm-saved seed, they offer expensive and imperfect solutions. The initiatives of this form of network is tightly circumscribed by the topic of the agreement. Further, it encourages, if not ensures, livestock industry influence, and circumscribes the ability of competing interest groups to affect public policy development. The content of the inaugural address is similarly circumscribed. Consistent with localization to cell membranes, the immunoreactivity formed a thin line that circumscribed individual somata. As we shall see below, however, these changes, aimed at introducing modern governing methods into distant provinces, were circumscribed by limitations of the treasury. Dominant disciplinary practices, by circumscribing our understanding of the way international politics is constituted, have denied international actors this capacity to think through the consequences of their actions. Despite the appearance of an objective process proceeding logically from premises through evidence to conclusions, the conclusions were already circumscribed by, immanent to, the framework of inquiry. Payouts, like investments, are tightly circumscribed. In other words, in each community, use of who is not representative of community norms, but is circumscribed, either to specific lexical items like people, or to specific individuals. However, reflections on one area of evidence, that of working memory span, shows the extent to which the research debate can be circumscribed by choice of experimental paradigms. They have been so circumscribed by drawings. As a result, the methods and conventions by which dominance was once exercised, and often circumscribed, within the locality has suffused the practices of governance more generally. Contact with male acquaintances was more tightly circumscribed than contact with females, and regulations stated the exact degrees of male kin who might be admitted to speak with a nun. Therefore, the interest in delegating regulatory authority to autonomous agencies that operate on the basis of general rules seem to be heavily circumscribed by political concerns. The use of deposit insurance was thereby circumscribed in this period, as banks on shaky ground were able to postpone coming to terms with their ®scal dif®culties. An individual's or a group's room for action is, however, circumscribed both by forces in the immediate surroundings, such as family and friends, and by those of the wider society. The new material does nothing to challenge the impression that the opportunities open to even an intelligent and well-born woman were circumscribed by pressures both internal and external. With the advance of colonial rule after 1900, hunting and field burning were circumscribed by legislation, and gradually male labor was channeled away from the rural economy into colonial pursuits. In both projects, state institutions translated transnational ideas and material incentives regarding indigeneity into domestic political formulas that, although tokenistic and highly circumscribed, have significantly altered the domestic ethnopolitical environment. The constitution provides the formal and legal framework for governance, but the informal and ' virtual ' discourse circumscribing political activity has blurred the lines of demarcation between government, front, and party. Moreover, this shortage of investigators is likely to rob the public sector of experienced professionals drawn to greener pastures where, however, the right to publish their results may be circumscribed. Because systems, and systems of systems, are distributed, they pose problems for capturing their essence and bringing them into what are, of necessity, circumscribed academic environments. Our discipline has spent relatively little time on the former route and has increasingly taken the second path, progressively circumscribing an increasingly specialized behavioral paradigm that rarely reflects real-world behaviors. Checklists possess increased validity when, as here, they are circumscribed to the child's current status and use a recognition format, placing fewer demands on the reporter's memory. He argues that this ability to engage in a cultural practice circumscribes a cultural producer's choices while at the same giving them the ability to make those choices. The reason was that my interests and activities were circumscribed by scientific and technological considerations. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 The position is already strictly circumscribed, because we are really dealing here only with cases of discretion. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 There is great inequality of wealth, trade union rights are heavily circumscribed and political parties are banned. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 Will it be circumscribed to this issue or will it go wider? From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 The function of the coroner's court is circumscribed. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 I wonder whether it is sensible to have quite so small and so circumscribed an elected proportion. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 The conduct of military operations is circumscribed by the provisions of international and national law. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 I should be reluctant to see it circumscribed by procedural requirements. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 One needs to bear in mind that all judicial discretion is to a certain extent circumscribed whether by statutory or appellate directions or indications. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 The role of the accused's solicitor is circumscribed. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 The interest rate is well below normal commercial rates and eligibility is circumscribed by regulations. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 All sovereign states have a legitimate resort to arms but that legitimate monopoly on the use of force is strictly circumscribed in international law. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 Of course, the scope for additional savings is not exhausted, but further moves in that direction are circumscribed by practical considerations and by political commitment. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 From no point of view is anybody thereby circumscribed. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 I am not aware of any case law which has circumscribed the power and responsibility of the police in relation to that particular function. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 Pre-emption certainly circumscribes an important aspect of the ownership of someone who has bought a house if the local authority exercises the right to pre-emption. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 All individual liberties in life are circumscribed within the bounds of responsibility. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 At no time has he been felt to have any abnormal preoccupations or circumscribed interest patterns. Architectural history is against architectural theory, which circumscribes architecture and insulates it from or mediates reality (and the past). A number of policy interventions have circumscribed the poor's access to land. The range of questions to be broached is inadequately considered and too swiftly justified, and, above all, the range of materials is ruthlessly circumscribed. Individual citizens can be likened to pistons - their freedom being carefully circumscribed by larger social designs, their telos structured by qualified engineers. Another limitation may exist to the obligation to treat, but needs to be carefully circumscribed. Nature (in almost all cases) fails to offer lesions circumscribed enough to allow a precise description of the language-brain relationship. On the other hand, a fairly circumscribed set of possibilities suggest themselves. One-third were in fair health, which means that their daily routines were affected by ailments but their independence was insignificantly circumscribed. The enzootic areas affected by rabies and its wildlife hosts are typically circumscribed, and the borders can be determined with reasonable accuracy. Moreover, when children enter the equation, the freedoms of adults become circumscribed too. Most works favour mid-range theorising, frequently policy oriented, on carefully circumscribed problems held in isolation from each other. 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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