To avoid the charge of monomania, the authors are careful to constrain their claims. |
|
That view led Gorham to interpret the raising of the age of consent as an effort to constrain modern sexuality. |
|
Geologists and geophysicists aim to accurately constrain the architecture and facies variations at the lava flow scale. |
|
This position goes against all appearances, which constrain our senses to believe that the sun is in continuous movement around the earth. |
|
We found evidence for purifying selection acting to constrain functional divergence between paralogous genes. |
|
Knowing some of their properties, such as monotonicity, is often sufficient to constrain the behavior of the variables. |
|
How do sexism, heterosexism and homophobia work together to constrain sexuality and gender and to punish transgression of these categories? |
|
Cultures and subcultures constrain us because we internalize their beliefs and values. |
|
He said problems of competitiveness would also severely constrain the small industry sector, which he feared would stagnate. |
|
The cumulative effect of these sites would be to reduce the flexibility and severely constrain the safe and efficient operation of the airspace. |
|
Help me, O God, to scrub away the guilt, to flush away the regrets, to polish and oil the rusty hinges that constrain my spirit. |
|
I will constrain my heart against my liking, save that I will not delude him with false hopes. |
|
Shortage of time in general practice consultations is widely acknowledged to constrain the quality of care of patients. |
|
Like other populists, Chavez disdains any party institutionalization that might constrain his personal autonomy. |
|
We asked how cultural antifeminism came to constrain therapists' identities and, ultimately, their functioning as therapists. |
|
Whether he will now lower his grandiose expectations and constrain his expansionist impulses remains to be seen. |
|
These external features are significant because they constrain managers to act in particular ways. |
|
Some argue that minimum wages constrain job creation by the onus they put on employers. |
|
Most people derive a living from agriculture and forestry, but isolation and limited access to markets constrain earning potential. |
|
Several parties objected to this text, stating that it could constrain mitigation actions. |
|
|
A European increase in these taxes will also constrain the introduction of different national systems of cost allocation. |
|
These latter qualities are often smothered by social convention and cultural prejudice which converge to constrain us from realising our full potential. |
|
Increased bureaucracy and interference in contracts between companies will constrain the labour market. |
|
The response will be to get more security, to constrain how freely ambassadors move around. |
|
Despite ASEAN's strong request, Japan was earlier reluctant to accede to the treaty amid worries that the pact could constrain its security alliance with the United States. |
|
Results will be used to constrain estimates of the frequency and magnitude of large future earthquakes in this highly populated corridor. |
|
Using this kinematic and kinetic perspective, we offer four specific criteria to help constrain and evaluate competing scenarios for the origin of the avian flight stroke. |
|
But when you can sing like that, how can you constrain that voice and possibly be comfortable in the back? |
|
It liberates him from the terms of battle that constrain the vincible. |
|
Mozart's operas to librettos by Da Ponte examine attempts to constrain the irrationality of desire within the artificial boundaries of class and society. |
|
But future cancer patients will have much to hope for, especially if lots of rival treatments emerge, since that should constrain their prices. |
|
Without the method what would be the result of the annual battle to constrain the Council to adjust our pay? |
|
These conditions constrain choice rather than offering freedom. |
|
These themes are used to give a sense of direction to staff, but not to constrain. |
|
Divergence times of living species, estimated from molecular clocks, have the potential to constrain hypotheses of the relationships of fossil species. |
|
In this regard, a changing climate represents one more factor that can exacerbate preexisting stressors and constrain current adaptive capacity. |
|
Despite all of his good advice, Pliny's fanatical work habits constrain him to permanent bachelorhood. |
|
Timely action can bolster both economic growth and development, while inaction may constrain both. |
|
Using the coevality constraint for the formation of such close binaries, the derived source properties are used to constrain available pre-main-sequence tracks. |
|
He argues that the main plot of the post-Stalin years was the waning of administrative pressure, but his sources constrain him to tell the story of reforms. |
|
|
While harm to identifiable others is generally agreed upon as a constraint on the morality of procreation, various views would constrain a right to procreate even further. |
|
The ISC says it agrees and recommends that the new surveillance law should list each intrusive capability available to MI5, MI6 and GCHQ and the human rights obligations that constrain their use. |
|
Tetra has argued that even if the two materials can be used for packaging the same products, PET and carton packaging systems form distinct product markets and the pricing of one does not constrain the pricing of the other. |
|
Such a priority should, of course, be seriously taken into account initially in the context of competitions for posts, but it must not constrain the actual outcome in practice. |
|
That would inevitably constrain the fiscal capacity of any government. |
|
On the contrary, it would needlessly constrain the flow of information and opinion and would thereby limit our choices, our capacity for creativity and our opportunity to make up our own minds. |
|
Some of these results reveal first of all that some of the inherent characteristics of traditional loan and deposit business constrain the cross-border expansion of commercial banking, even in a common currency area. |
|
Accordingly, while these events may constrain our ability to increase operating cash flows in the near term, we remain confident in our ability to achieve our long-term objectives. |
|
The way to constrain the geological origin of the Lomonosov Ridge, then, is to simply reverse the motion of the plates digitally and go back far enough in time, in a number of bite-size time increments. |
|
Because it has become an easy way to crop in an economy where nothing pays and offfarm jobs constrain the time available to plant and manage a crop properly. |
|
Advisory guidelines can limit the range of results and constrain the issues and information required, thereby encouraging settlement and damping down some of the conflict between the parties. |
|
Compounded by weak adaptive capacity, the situation posed a serious threat to past development gains and could constrain future development in Africa. |
|
As the mission is still in the initial stages of its deployment, uncertainties related to implementation and the mission's limited experience to date constrain forecasting requirements. |
|
From the perspective of NATO and the United States, missile proliferation in the Middle East and North Africa can affect Europes security and constrain it freedom in the Mediterranean. |
|
A small national scientific community and limited facilities for field research constrain the gathering and processing of important biodiversity data in Madagascar. |
|
Geotherm as well as micro diamond analysis are proposed to further constrain these results before bulk sampling is undertaken. |
|
But it provides a robust guardrail to constrain risk-taking. |
|
They generally held that there are underlying principles of design that constrain all constitutions for every polity or organization. |
|
From the relationships, it may be possible to constrain the date that lineages first appeared. |
|
These general requirements constrain the oculometric method to an optical observation of the area within and around the pupil. |
|
|
Training walls are built to constrain a river or creek as it discharges across a sandy coastline. |
|
Older reconstructions rely mainly on paleomagnetic pole data, although these only constrain the latitude and rotation, but not the longitude. |
|
Individuals are held to communally approved customs that evoke a legitimate communal authority that can constrain the possible outcomes. |
|
This would shackle the Republic to French policies and so constrain its independence. |
|
It is a goal of industry and scientists alike to better constrain the sources of fugitive methane emissions from man-made activities. |
|
Thou oughtest not to be slothful to the destruction of the miscreants, but to constrain them to obey our Lord God. |
|
Stabilization policy attempts to stimulate an economy out of recession or constrain the money supply to prevent excessive inflation. |
|
In his Genealogy of Morals, he argues that human rights exist as a means for the weak to collectively constrain the strong. |
|
But the Court also said that expanding its role in this way would substantially intrude into the workplace and could constrain employers' efforts to make their businesses more efficient. |
|
Fearful that Western values will undermine its rule, the Party is considering a new law that would constrain nongovernment organizations — including even ones as apolitical as study-abroad programs. |
|
Jokes about serious problems, like wars or torture, constrain discussion in a particularly insidious way: their humorousness undermines any criticism of the act of joking. |
|
This last condition is actually part of a larger disjunct for Feinberg, the other half of which allows that the coercer may be bluffing, and thus does not actively do anything to constrain the coercee's options. |
|
Some academics draw a distinction between rules that constrain the parties, including in effect rules on the formation of contracts, and those which do not. |
|
Earlier emperors had sought to constrain groups of men to perform certain tasks that were deemed vital to the survival of the state but that proved unremunerative or repellent to those forced to assume the burden. |
|
So it's worth revisiting how Americans conceive of the struggle to restrict the government's use of coercive force. There are several ways to constrain government agents from employing their power tyrannically. |
|
While pipeline capacity limitations continued to constrain further growth in exports, gas exports during the summer low season increased by 10 per cent compared to the previous year. |
|
Furthermore, even for primary gyratory crushers and jaw crushers, there is no indication that customers would have sufficient countervailing power to substantially constrain the competitive behaviour of the merged entity. |
|
Chapter III examines women's position in the labour market and the factors that constrain their capacity to respond to new economic opportunities and bargain for fairer returns to their labour. |
|
In any local situation, there are cultural values and institutions that can support, constrain or even completely frustrate well-meant development programmes and projects. |
|
Limited access and high energy costs constrain growth and competitiveness. |
|
|
In a system of parliamentary supremacy, the judiciary has no standing on which to constrain majoritarian lawgiving for the purposes of rights-protection. |
|
The presence of external laws, claims and cultural mores either potentially or actually act to variously constrain the practices and observances of an indigenous society. |
|
Experimental results show that infants have access to intermediate prosodic phrases during the first year of life, and use these to constrain lexical segmentation. |
|
For instance, CB1 on glutamatergic neurons constrain the expression of fear responses, once the averseness of the test situation has surpassed a certain threshold. |
|
The redesigns followed the closure of some city heliports and government action to constrain flight paths in national parks and other places of natural beauty. |
|
It also examines how the understanding of cognition, emotion, motivation, and similar psychological processes inform or constrain our models of cultural and social processes. |
|