Limits, bans and prohibitions are the name of the game in construction and transport, just as they are in matters to do with smoking and obesity. |
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The writer again represents a loose, not a strict, construction of dietary prohibitions. |
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Despite prohibitions, Clara continues to read and write avidly throughout her term of service. |
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Some churchmen are heard to grumble about violations of the prohibitions of shared worship with heretics and schismatics. |
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The prohibitions include a ban on trading and sleeping on the sidewalk, green areas, riverbanks and other public places. |
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The advocates claim that enforcing prohibitions against colonizing public and private space penalizes street vagrants merely for being homeless. |
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To respect local sensitivities, there were religious prohibitions on filming males or females in a state of undress, or in the toilet. |
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There are eight classes of injunctions and prohibitions which apply to all deeds and actions of mankind. |
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The European Union boycott and American prohibitions are not seriously handicapping Burma. |
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When they do, it will be helpful if people who encounter off-roaders who disregard the prohibitions will report the violations to the police. |
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By invoking prohibitions in this way the nation seeks to establish universally acknowledged strongholds. |
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What matters most is that prohibitions against human cruelty be hard and binding. |
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Pipes says catching sleepers has been hampered by regulations, immigration law, and prohibitions on ethnic profiling. |
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No government would contend that these prohibitions apply only to parties to the treaties that outlaw them. |
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In the absence of statutory criminal prohibitions, the transactions involved in the scheme and the scheme itself are lawful. |
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In an arms races to prove they are holier than thou, rabbis add more and more prohibitions and prerequisites. |
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Attached to this law were prohibitions against blockbusting tactics. |
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The new style of their music, net T-shirts, which exposed more than was usual then, her unyieldingness and eccentric opinions caused lots of bans and prohibitions. |
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His work encodes and decodes physical and cultural landscapes in ways that challenge the assumptions, proscriptions, and prohibitions built into human environments. |
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When courts extend constitutional prohibitions beyond their previously recognized limit, they may restrict democratic choices made by public bodies. |
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Following the logic of social control theory, it is predicted that workers would have to neutralize the bind of the law, the prohibitions against theft. |
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Now that hayward has fully transitioned there are new prohibitions regarding what she cannot do in religious settings. |
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These norms are said to gain their strength from universal acceptance, such as the prohibitions against genocide and slavery. |
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Interest prohibitions imposed secondary costs by discouraging record keeping and delaying the introduction of modern accounting. |
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Cutting deals with labour racketeers effectively allowed these employers to circumvent prohibitions against the formation of company unions. |
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A traffic sign provides to drivers basics and advanced informations about traffic restrictions, determines them commands and prohibitions. |
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He decided to focus his attention on the Kingdom of Portugal, which consistently violated his trade prohibitions. |
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The Union Flag has no official status, and there are no national regulations concerning its use or prohibitions against flag desecration. |
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Merchants also, however, sometimes smuggled other goods to circumvent prohibitions or embargoes on particular trades. |
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Likewise, the Swedes had the right to go to Gotland without corn restrictions or other prohibitions. |
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The government's enforcement of the prohibitions varied and often related to the degree of a clan's support during the rebellion. |
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France does not recognise religious law as a motivation for the enactment of prohibitions. |
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By 1905 all Australian states and territories had passed similar laws making prohibitions to Opium sale. |
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In theory, each different mix had a name and different sets of privileges or prohibitions. |
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Land disposal prohibitions are listed in Subpart C of Part 268, including prohibitions for solvents, dioxins and the California listed wastes. |
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The extent of enforcement of the prohibitions was variable and sometimes related to a clan's support of the government during the rebellion. |
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Order restrictions and prohibitions to abate an emergency situation. |
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The Medical Records Confidentiality Act of 1995 did not go far enough, since it contains many exemptions to prohibitions against transmitting patient identifiable information. |
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History meant that feeling was now replaced by rational thought, and private considerations by public, accompanied by properties, prohibitions and restraints. |
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With one exception, in the United States an acquittal cannot be appealed by the prosecution because of constitutional prohibitions against double jeopardy. |
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The law prohibits arbitrary interference with privacy, family, home, or correspondence, and the government generally respects these prohibitions in practice. |
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The imperative mood expresses direct commands, prohibitions, and requests. |
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From this moment, the name Byron became synonymous with all the prohibitions and audacities as if it had stirred up the very essence of the rise of those forbidden things. |
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They had several social and legal disabilities such as prohibitions against bearing arms or giving testimony in courts in cases involving Muslims. |
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