These days Brown seldom grants interviews, confining most communications to his website. |
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He expends all his energies reacting to the incessant, queasy lurch of the metallic object confining his limbs. |
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For the immediate future, he will be confining his training to one night a week with each team. |
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There were no words confining the cover to a period while actual repairs were taking place. |
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Working within the confining definitions of black and white magic, this would be a black magic spell. |
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Cora refused to wear such a confining and uncomfortable article of clothing as the wimple, which wrapped around a woman's head and neck. |
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The electrons exert a pressure on the ions just like an ideal gas exerts pressure on the walls of a confining box. |
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But if you are the only lawyer in town, chances are you won't be confining your legal consultations to office hours. |
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This can be due to increasing confining pressure, tectonic stress in impervious sediments or hydrothermal activity. |
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Generally, the sand stiffness decreases by decreasing the effective confining pressure or increasing the shear strains. |
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There are the pieces barely there in form, undefined and tentative, as if they were emerging from the confining blob of clay. |
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Critics of regulation effectively cede the offensive to statists by confining their critique to case studies of regulation gone awry. |
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These data consist of raw facts, as free as possible of confining hypotheses. |
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Gerald, I am sorry to do this but I hereby demote you to the rank of ensign and I am confining you to your quarters till further notice. |
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Perhaps the adjurations are against confining the remedial provisions by reference to common law doctrines and limitations. |
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Administrators responded with an institution lockdown, confining all prisoners to their cells. |
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The battery extension assembly includes a hollow cylindroid body, a confining structure and an elastic holding member. |
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But as per the successful snow job of U.S. operators, it seems to be confining its inquiries to international termination inputs. |
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We Brits are not confining ourselves to exporting our traditional behavior to Portugal. |
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By confining small fish to living in suboptimal foraging habitat, predation may have important sublethal effects on populations. |
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However, working within genre films, whether horror, high-school or romantic comedy, is a more confining situation. |
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A good teacher really does keep pointing the way upward and forward, and really does let the student grow without confining him in a cage. |
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In 1950 the US government withdrew his passport on a trumped up pretext, effectively confining him to internal exile. |
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For evaluating rutting tendency we have the wheeltracker test, a triaxial test with confining stress, and a Marshall test. |
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The Mediterranean countries as a whole thus generally have no economic interest in confining themselves to such exclusivity. |
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When the organism within the egg has grown and developed to the point that its transparent capsule is too confining, it is ready to break out. |
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I regret that we are confining ourselves to the bare minimum, i.e. working conditions. |
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It is no use confining ourselves to a diagnosis of the current tragic situation and a prognosis of its inauspicious prospects, however. |
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I guess what you must ask yourself is are you prepared to date someone who eroticizes race in a way that may be confining to your individual personality? |
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It is at once confining and infinitely sinuous, so at Biennale-time it abounds with situations I call bonjour, Monsieur Courbet! |
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Then the Ridge in front was wreathed in flame as the shells burst, confining the Germans, to their dugouts while our men advanced to the assault. |
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Removal of water from compressible materials such as silt and clay can lead to compaction of the confining unit and subsidence of the land surface. |
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It is sending the army over to Iraq and confining North Korea within its region. |
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Further, the propriety of the s. 26 exemption was not argued, counsel confining themselves to the s. 27 exemption. |
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Deeper sediments are more consolidated, have higher confining pressures, and consequently are less likely to liquefy. |
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She deprives language of its mimetic function, confining it to the site of its utterance and apprehension rather than using it as a tool to comprehend the world. |
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Furthermore, the possibility of removing or confining the contaminated soils results in significant potential technical problems. |
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We are leaving both the letters and the two decisions to the side and, as we said, confining our analysis to what happened in Elliott. |
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In the vast majority of plant species, it is not possible to remove the epidermis intact, confining direct measurement of epidermal transmission largely to mesophytic plants. |
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In particular, it said, the terms were too restrictive in confining the examination to just three hospitals and to deceased children under 12 years who were born alive. |
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They quarantined the city workers' struggle, confining it within the political straitjacket of collective bargaining and appeals to the big business politicians. |
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Ultimately, confining logical molecules in layers or three-dimensional lattices of nanoscopic bubbles might allow a true molecular computer to be built. |
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The government is confining its own people to unskilled low-paying jobs. |
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The increase of pore pressure due to cyclic loadings under undrained conditions causes the effective confining pressure and the shear strength of the soil to decrease. |
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Real aren't just confining their attentions to one bit of Manchester, mind. |
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Yet Governor Jay Nixon was sharply criticised for confining the soldiers to guarding a police command centre while the city burned. |
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Even when the appropriate staff were available routine malpractices, like reusing unsterilised needles and confining patients to their beds for hours on end, continued. |
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Victorian conceptions of women's comportment and their place in society as well as everyone else's place in the Victorian age seem strange and confining. |
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Indeed, Giselle's post-treatment experience of disciplinary panopticism is more confining once she has been marked as anorexic. |
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They rejected both Marxism and modernization theory as alien and confining. |
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Although the tables, chairs, beds, and other props change, the view of stark window walls at dusk provides an unvaryingly sombre and confining backdrop. |
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We like to think that women have come a long way in the past century, but the obsession with confining shapewear, and with outer beauty at the cost of physical comfort, implies that we have not. |
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Nick Clegg said confining mentally ill people, including children, to police custody when appropriate services are not available is wrong. |
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By confining ourselves to denouncing the fanaticism that drives them as a strange and diabolical phenomenon which must be eradicated with the use of force, we lock into a vicious circle. |
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What Stalin made me drink seemed pretty savage: Winston, who by that time was complaining of a slight headache, seemed wisely to be confining himself to a comparatively innocuous effervescent Caucasian red wine. |
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The regime can survive by further confining its area of control to the western area of the country, where its grip is firmest. A political solution looks just as improbable. |
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Another would chip away at laws protecting workers against dismissal, by, for instance, confining some protections to people in companies with more than 20 employees. |
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Compliance with that deadline is admittedly confining and the requirement to appear in court for any extension of the deadline gives rise to costs. |
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In some parts of the country trial courts feel bound by appellate court rulings confining time-limited orders to a narrow range of exceptional cases, primarily short marriages without children. |
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For more than 40 years, public policies have favoured keeping people with serious mental health problems in the community, rather than confining them to asylums, as was too long the practice. |
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These fine-grained materials represent the major confining unit that, when present, hinders the interaction between the regional aquifer units and the surface water network. |
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Our shared objective in the final stage of negotiations is to remove some of the most confining parts of the Indian Act, which currently restrict the authority and power of First Nations governments. |
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The lead seals confining the liquefying body of the former king were not secure and foulsome black ooze seeped from one edge. |
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Each sample was contained in a piezometer cell, together with a confining fluid, which must not interact with the samples. |
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Kidnapping usually includes the seizing, confining, and carrying away of another by force, threat, or deception, and without consent. |
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So, little by little, youth loosens the hard carapace of confining custom their elders have built over the human heart. |
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Supporters of state-run boot camps say that they are more productive than confining youths in prison. |
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While in Alaska hunting caribou, a storm system blew in, confining me to my small pup tent. |
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Then, by crossing two laser beams to form thousands of light tubes capable of confining atoms, the team divvied up the atom cloud into a hundred-or-so atoms per tube. |
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During the decades of Mutual Assured Destruction, nuclear-armed states were cautious about provocations, confining their interference and bombing to nonnuclear states. |
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