This is evident when they propose to narrowly restrict eligibility for Third World debt remission so as not to offend the bankers of the West. |
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The real owners of the software can restrict you or stores and not allow anyone to rent it to others. |
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He did not restrict himself to studying mathematics, however, for he studied other topics such as astronomy, meteorology and chemistry. |
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The costumes in costume drama have a tendency to restrict the action by showcasing their splendour. |
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Since many binge eaters restrict food intake during the day and binge at night, the goal is to get them to eat three meals a day and a snack. |
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The south-west monsoon from May to October brings heavy rain and heavy seas and can restrict diving. |
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Essentially the government's aim is to restrict freedom of the press in order to silence any voice of criticism, no matter how faltering. |
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Parents, for a start, should restrict a child's viewing hours to around a couple of hours every day. |
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Already by 1760 some upriver communities were calling on the Nova Scotia government to restrict net fishing at the mouths of rivers. |
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However, they are repositories of infection and restrict the movement of animals. |
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The talks revolve around whether to grant them refugee status and over how to restrict their movements and activities in Europe. |
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These would restrict development, ensuring the character of the areas remained unchanged. |
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The parliament called upon member states to immediately restrict the use of high intensity active naval sonar in waters under their jurisdiction. |
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Also, this can restrict the unfavorableness that noise is superposed on the wiring. |
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Particularly troubling to business aviation is its proposal to restrict general aviation aircraft from using these airports altogether. |
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When we move forward we will do everything we can to generate income to restrict to a minimum the sale of players. |
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The tight fiscal situation will severely restrict how much action the government can take to counteract a slowdown. |
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The pollution could also restrict their blood flow, causing strokes and heart attacks. |
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Criticising unrestrained growth of the city, he wonders whether one could restrict it. |
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As early as 1790, Americans began to restrict the naturalization of immigrants. |
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Radical feminists demand an end to all systems and structures that in any way restrict women's sexual preferences and procreative choices. |
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And there are state and national park areas that restrict snowmobiling too. |
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The bill will also restrict the powers of telecommunications companies to disrupt traffic flow by opening roads for cable laying. |
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I took one look at the form for that particular novices' hurdle, and advised him to restrict his bet to a nominal sum. |
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The United States struck back to restrict Ian Thorpe and Australia to one solitary silver medal on day four of the Olympics. |
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The move was made to restrict zoning, said Stevens, in order to avoid having a retail store set up where it was unwanted. |
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Patent laws restrict what we may do with the raw materials we buy and seek to transform into products in our factories or machine shops. |
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Trees and shrubs close to the lagoon restrict air flow and block sunlight that algae need to produce oxygen. |
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If we take RBC seriously, the sin of totalitarian nations who restrict people's movements lies simply in not being imaginative enough. |
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The key criticism is over the government's plan to restrict jackpot machines offering unlimited cash prizes to only the largest casinos. |
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Experts say regular use of anti-bacterial wipes and specialist IT contractors can help restrict keyboard infection rates. |
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He said he would prepare legislation to sharply restrict the withdrawal of feeding tubes and other life support from brain-dead patients. |
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First, the application did not check or restrict the types of file that could be uploaded. |
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Why should the nationality of our parents be used to categorise us and restrict our rights of freedom and nationality? |
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In today's fast-paced websphere, any attempt to restrict content is probably doomed to failure anyway. |
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We share those customary rights with all comers there, and we do not restrict their access. |
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We will restrict our discussion of virtual reality to the meaning it has in relation to the Internet. |
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Eliminate or restrict severely the intake of stimulants such as caffeine or alcohol. |
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Further legislation will restrict the creation of tobacco-brand spin-offs, such as clothing lines. |
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Imposing draconian laws that restrict civil liberties will not prevent terrorist attacks. |
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Government policy has tried to stop or at least restrict slash-and-burn cultivation, both in Finland earlier and in the tropics today. |
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With the technology available to do otherwise, why restrict our geographical area and put up with crawlingly slow Internet connections? |
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If one assigns to the authorities the power to imprison or even to kill people, one must restrict and clearly circumscribe this power. |
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When the composition limits restrict the use of scrap, the product is designated as primary or virgin casting alloy ingot. |
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A sentence of imprisonment is intended to restrict the rights and freedoms of a prisoner. |
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These particles can get stuck in the mechanical workings of the faucet and restrict the flow. |
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Many theorists have chosen to restrict the picaresque and the baroque to specific time periods. |
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One way to improve the accuracy of voice recognition is to restrict the vocabulary of the system. |
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Some prisons restrict inmates' access to Bibles, or prohibit inmates from having concordances or biblical commentaries. |
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Since the law confers this public right, I deprecate any attempt artificially to restrict its scope. |
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The conferees also agreed to restrict further research on the program without extensive consultation with Congress. |
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In order to perform effectively as an insulant a material must restrict heat flow by any of the three methods of heat transfer. |
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The hard-headed finitist has to restrict logic even further than the intuitionist does. |
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I chose not to restrict myself to using either positivist or interpretive methods, but to adopt a pragmatic approach to data collection. |
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A swipe card system has also been introduced to restrict parking to a specific area. |
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People tend to lose weight quickly on low-carb diets because they restrict their calories to about 1,200 a day. |
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A date limit option is provided to restrict your search to the more recent records. |
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So small-minded is this government that it is unable even to organise the bill to restrict docking of dogs' tails. |
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That would eliminate potential infection and restrict the extent of excision. |
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To restrict Bradman, the English captain Douglas Jardine instructed his bowlers to direct their attack short on or outside the leg stump. |
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Timaeus did not restrict his treatment to Sicily but dealt with the whole west including Carthage. |
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We restrict ourselves to the case where the brush layers are squeezed against each other but they do not interdigitate. |
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We would seek to avoid obtruding on to the slopes traditionally used for sledging, or to restrict the area used by horse riders. |
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But the Minister, under pressure from the farming unions, failed to restrict cattle movements. |
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To enhance its generalizability, this study did not restrict its sample in terms of partner domiciles or host country locations. |
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But again, there will be legally binding conditions which restrict the occupancy of the dwelling. |
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State and local regulations restrict smoking in a culture that further discourages it. |
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You can also restrict the selection to an exact priority instead of to a given priority and higher with the equals sign. |
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Patent holders can charge a license fee for their invention and restrict who uses it. |
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Can you comment on the way those acts disempower citizens and restrict rights many consider basic to democracy? |
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They would restrict or eliminate emissions trading, thus preventing industry from seeking out the best solutions. |
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Rates also tend to be higher on accounts that restrict the number of withdrawals per year. |
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The United States has resisted European efforts to restrict the percentage of a country's commitments that can be met by emissions trading. |
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Many health-conscious athletes restrict their salt intake on a daily basis, believing this will help prevent blood pressure problems. |
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Rising losses led to a restriction of new bank funding, forcing the company to drastically retrench and restrict lending. |
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Eye diseases such as glaucoma and cataracts, and joint diseases such as arthritis may severely restrict your mobility. |
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He is sponsoring legislation to restrict municipalities' rights to take property by eminent domain. |
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If the game is to restrict access to lifestyle drugs, the example should be set at the top. |
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We can then use the require directive line to restrict users to one or more particular groups. |
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Discourage or restrict the use of private vehicles by means of stringent conditions. |
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Legislation would be required to restrict entry to the stud book and this will not be forthcoming. |
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The Act also provides that export agreements should not restrict the possibilities of participation or withdrawal. |
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Rather than attempt a comprehensive overview, I restrict myself to some observations on the different kinds of grounding devices. |
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Lower parental income might also restrict access to funds for education among these youth. |
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As the parasites accumulate in the blood vessels, they can restrict circulation and cause fluid to build up in surrounding tissues. |
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Should we always accept positions that involve solely nutrition and dietetics, or might that restrict our practice? |
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Higher fuel prices can cause unwelcome rises in inflation, restrict economic growth and are unpopular with voters. |
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Firstly he legislated to restrict the Commission's power to arbitrate and, in doing so, its capacity to conciliate. |
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To restrict fluid to the extent of causing dehydration may even be harmful. |
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There is no need to disproportionately restrict the intake of carbohydrates in the diet of most diabetic patients. |
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Yet it is not possible to restrict the bonds of affection denominationally without denying the gospel of Christ. |
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There are regulations going through to restrict the sales of pseudoephedrine. |
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A federal bill to restrict sales of cold medicines containing pseudoephedrine cleared the Senate Judiciary Committee this week. |
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During an endoscopic thoracic sympathectomy, a small clip is surgically attached to the sweatgland nerves to restrict the flood waters. |
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By that date, diesel-engine manufacturers were to restrict emissions of nitrous oxides and particulates to tough new limits. |
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We certainly expect that derivative and credit market problems will restrict demand for loan syndications. |
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Air pollutants, such as carbon monoxide, often found in buildings near major roads, restrict the oxygen-carrying capacity of the blood. |
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It is impossible to judge to what extent remaining motor vehicle tariffs restrict imports and market penetration from developing countries. |
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The SEC is examining whether new rules are needed to clarify financial reports and perhaps restrict use of pro formas. |
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Patients often find that they must restrict or change their diet to avoid excess wind, odour or loose stool. |
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The desk can then be placed under the window, and the blind used to restrict light when needed. |
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Repeated stretching and sizing fatigues the brass to the point where it will eventually split, but I restrict things a little more. |
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Precision need not restrict, it can lead to delicate nuances and subtle bloom. |
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Councillors agreed to restrict the use of the car park to daylight hours, with the gates being locked at 8pm each evening. |
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We are most interested in identifying genes that restrict cell growth and cell proliferation. |
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They can check if any deeds or covenants exist on neighbouring plots, which may restrict site access. |
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So, the recent measures to restrict smoking in indoor environments are to be welcomed. |
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Whereas wrong desires restrict and fetter, right desires enhance and liberate. |
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He feared the activities of a communist fifth column, and enacted draconian laws to restrict free expression and assembly. |
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Detail about the extent to which professions restrict the numbers joining their ranks is another striking finding of the report. |
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To keep things manageable for this short conspectus of my view, I shall restrict myself to bases on which a belief is originally formed. |
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I think it is a pity that they did not get an opportunity to curtail the hours and restrict the use of the main auditorium. |
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Attempts by the British to restrict further expansion into the western frontier constituted one of the factors contributing to the Revolution. |
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It was quite hot that evening and not being a man to restrict his crown jewels in boxers all night, yours truly was sleeping in the buff. |
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While clever enough in theory, the chairs in reality clutter the stage and restrict the cast's sorely needed freedom to move. |
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The law gives the government the power to restrict freedom of the press and freedom of assembly and to shut down theaters. |
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That could be a bit tricky to judge, unless we restrict the voting to NGamer forumites. |
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Surely it is only a matter of time before technology grows and becomes such an irrepressible force that to try to restrict it would be folly. |
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The incident comes in the wake of widespread calls to restrict the sale of fireworks to members of the public. |
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Some kind of ration system may also be considered to restrict the consumption of oil. |
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It puts out a real sticky, tacky substance and is designed to restrict the movement of somebody. |
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Welfare benefits are being reduced and new provisions introduced to restrict access to welfare. |
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The Californian state assembly has voted to ban soda sales to elementary school students and restrict sales of the drinks at junior high schools. |
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This was the result of the elephant tamers chaining the animal in order to restrict its movements, when it was very young and impressionable. |
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Confusion prevailed even at the gates with each passing babu passing orders to the gate keeper to allow or restrict the entry of people. |
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Its heritage of canon law sought to restrict greed and avarice for the common good of society. |
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The main focus of most efforts to restrict gear is the gill net, considered to be the main cause of the depletion of local fisheries. |
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They want to restrict the disclaimers to those journos and commentators who have affiliations with centre right politics. |
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You've just got to put that to the back of your mind and make sure it doesn't restrict you. |
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They agreed to restrict rail traffic away from travel time for school age children. |
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Olivia suffers from two rare conditions which severely restrict almost everything she does. |
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In other words, the plan is not to restrict the wireless footprint of these hotspots. |
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Efforts to restrict Canadian re-exports will be costly and by necessity only partially successful. |
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Using packet filtering, firewalls can restrict the types of activity allowed, such as permitting web access and email but denying telnet and ftp. |
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They would restrict the ability of governments to regulate foreign investment or to take measures to develop local enterprises. |
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Often, allergists will instruct parents to completely restrict the allergen from the child's diet. |
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They should restrict access to sensitive information to only those employees with a need to know. |
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If we restrict ourselves to the 2x2 arrays whose diagonals lie on the main diagonal of the table, then the sum of four numbers in the array is always a perfect square. |
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We want to restrict the employers' ability to contract out bargaining unit work. |
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Our debt obligations do not currently restrict our ability to pay distributions as long as we are not in default under these agreements. |
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In addition, Austria has promised that BB will restrict its activities by desisting from granting Federal loans. |
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Before Cellini, memoirists tended to restrict themselves to professional accomplishments and philosophy. |
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One of the single parents, in a flat shared with males, felt compelled to restrict her use of the communal water closet to early morning and last thing at night. |
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Wearing a corset can restrict oxygenation, which is needed to help your body function, including your metabolism. |
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The majority had to severely restrict their lives by changing or abandoning work, curtailing all social activities, and becoming virtual recluses. |
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The planning committee unanimously rejected the proposal on the grounds it would restrict access to the footway and could force pedestrians out into the roadway. |
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Republicans have a host of other pet bills to restrict abortion access in the context of the new health-care legislation. |
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The classic Riester pneumatic tourniquet is a reliable device which is used during amputations to restrict blood circulation in the limbs. |
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Democrats want to expand the electorate, and Republicans want to restrict it. |
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No laws or executive orders should be imposed to limit or restrict access to this type of therapy. |
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This type of risk is arising from a decision of a foreign government to restrict capital movements, which would make it difficult to repatriate profits, dividends or capital. |
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Yes: Affix bike racks inside the sheltered, secure area and restrict access with a key, combination lock or swipe-card entry. |
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The rights to information and travel are restated and reaffirmed in the proposal and no court will be able to restrict the rights of any woman to travel abroad. |
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Successful women performers thus had to have a demure appearance and restrict their body movements on stage to conform to idealized concepts of womanhood. |
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Kenya does not in any way restrict its neighbours in the use of these shared resources. |
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Protestant divines had tended to restrict typology to figures, actions, and objects in the Old Testament which in their view shadowed forth Christ as their antitype. |
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They can be served on people to restrict them from going to a certain place, associating with particular people, or even dressing in a certain way. |
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When the authority grants such licences, it normally attaches conditions in order to restrict the effect of the anti-competitive aspects of the deal. |
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The push to restrict people's opportunities to buy and sell based on region is an attempt to bring about what economists call autarky, or economic self-sufficiency. |
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This decision, however, would conveniently restrict Slovenia's direct access to international waters. |
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A blanket copyright extension would encourage record companies to restrict access to their entire back catalogues, even works that they would never exploit. |
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Don't hesitate to do some sport which will restrict the weight gain and help you let off steam. |
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Yet while the company promises to bring broadband to every home in Britain, the country's crisis in the supply of homes can only restrict the spread of telework. |
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The analogy emerges that some hybrid zones act as semipermeable membranes that provide a conduit for gene flow at some loci and restrict it at others. |
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Avoid or restrict sugary foods like chocolates, toffees, desserts etc. |
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Also not susceptible to compromise was the decision to restrict beer consumption to two beer gardens, in keeping with the family tone of the event. |
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It is feasible to design a pair of boots that restrict rotation of the foot to the inside or outside, but still allow total mobility in pointing the toe. |
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Although he argues for the simultaneity of a narrativity apart from history, he theorizes his observations in ways that restrict their play and their application. |
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We consider it too fainthearted to restrict ourselves to the reforms contained in the Amsterdam Protocol. |
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The south-east monsoon cuts visibility from June to August, but the main rains come with the north-west monsoon from December to March, when heavy seas can restrict diving. |
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It could also be used by planners to restrict noisy commercial development in areas free from excessive noise or to ensure new housing is sited further away from busy roads. |
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Hospital networks may have thousands of access points, making it impossible to restrict access solely to staff who have been personally vetted by each doctor. |
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Worse yet, as the economy continued to spiral downward, the inflow of dollars slowed, forcing the currency board to restrict the country's money supply even further. |
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Youghal Town Council was planning to implement stringent bye-laws next month to control and restrict pleasure craft within the harbour, which boasts two Blue Flag beaches. |
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This can restrict airflow and cause snoring, congestion and nosebleeds. |
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Most Americans would restrict abortion, but not ban it completely. To ardent pro-lifers, the law today is immorally lax. |
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Likewise, the cell-phone market is stagnating because manufacturers and carriers restrict which features consumers can add to their proprietary systems. |
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However, despite such examples, it is commonly believed that if you restrict yourself to looking at convex polygons, this question has a positive answer. |
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A court could likewise restrict a father's teaching his children that women must be subservient to men, since such speech might undermine the mother's authority. |
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This may be one way of ensuring that the traffic warden cannot put a parking ticket under them, but it also means that the extra large pillars can restrict the view. |
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In Europe, patriarchy flourished as institutions such as the family, the guild, and the university evolved to restrict or exclude women's presence and power. |
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Covered moorage can restrict visibility from one waterway to another. It is therefore critical to keep rafting boats in marina waterways to a minimum. |
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The Harrogate resident began a campaign to restrict the use of fireworks and became part of a national lobby group that petitioned MPs for change. |
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In the constructive theory of linear codes, we can restrict attention to the isometry classes of indecomposable codes, as it was shown by Slepian. |
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The intricacy of this fight cannot be over emphasised as it permeates all levels of society and does not restrict itself to the urban or the metropolitan areas. |
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Algeria cannot accede to any measure or action of any kind which might restrict that right. |
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But European policy could restrict itself to creating appropriate conditions, and practical obstacles should be cleared away. |
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An employee who is declared surplus must be trainable, must cooperate in placement efforts, and must not unduly restrict his or her mobility. |
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Some, however, were seeking to restrict freedom of expression and by doing so were contributing to more divisiveness. |
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We will not unreasonably restrict you from the use of these funds while the matter is being resolved. |
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It would be incongruent to restrict evidence while expecting a different criteria to be applied. |
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It would restrict eastbound capacity in a way which would not simply lead to a transfer of market share to independent shipping lines. |
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I will restrict myself to these three points in order to bring you up to date with events. |
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The measure must be temporary and must not needlessly restrict the rights of others. |
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Our debt obligations do not restrict our ability to pay distributions as long as we are in compliance with our credit agreements. |
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If civil law judges restrict recovery, it is not as a matter of law, but on the basis of the facts and causal connection. |
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In the past four years, different attempts to restrict its use have failed to pass. |
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Mr Bush is unlikely to veto bills to raise the minimum wage or to restrict and make more transparent the way lobbyists schmooze lawmakers. |
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A lack of clearance between the valve guide and the valve stem can also restrict valve rotation. |
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However, it is not enough to restrict European action to just this one short-term scheme. |
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The authorities are not likely to act heavy-handedly to restrict credit growth. |
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The government passed legislation to restrict conditional sentences for violent criminals. |
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This will quantitatively restrict the development of nuclear weapons capabilities. |
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Therefore, it is desirable not to restrict analysis to young people but to report on other age groups as well. |
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Consequently, any entry controls will restrict considerably but will not wipe out the danger of bringing in the virus. |
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Measures to restrict harvest of wild fish would affect the Morell and other large streams. |
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The concern that patent rights could restrict pre-existing practices is ill-founded. |
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The scheme should only be able to restrict authorisation, clearing and settlement to the scheme itself. |
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The emergency response plans should be designed so as to restrict radioactive contamination and radiation exposure. |
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When looking at the food label, examine the serving size and determine if you can restrict yourself to that amount. |
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In addition, a number of emerging markets restrict foreign investment in stocks. |
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This setting allows you to restrict the group of users that can join the game. |
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They restrict the pathway by means of a throttling mechanism similar to that of a needle valve. |
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Such digging, if not properly planned and executed, can damage or destroy tree root systems, restrict tree root growth, and alter subsurface soil water movement. |
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You can either calculate the absolute interest on the base amount or restrict the calculation to a certain period. |
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Membership is constrained by industry-wide belt-tightening measures that often restrict travel, corporate sponsorships, and funding individual membership dues. |
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The idea is to restrict builders and other tradesmen who use the site on a daily basis rather than paying for their vans and lorry loads to be tipped at landfill sites. |
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We can restrict the numbers of our own boats, we can insist that they have scientists, scientists monitoring the trawl and we can ban the pair trawling within our own waters. |
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A simple Guyot pruning and rubbing out unwanted buds are designed to restrict yield. |
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Third, money laundering is conducted as a way of handling illegal gains, and so stopping the laundering should restrict the committing of those other crimes. |
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Young women from the developed world who restrict their dietary intake are at highest risk of developing bulimia nervosa and other eating disorders. |
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Chinese people are often successful in business, but local rules in Malaysia and Indonesia restrict their activities through the bumiputra system. |
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The antilabor forces combated efforts to restrict immigration, feeling that the success of the open shop crusade depended in good part upon the availability of cheap foreign labor. |
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It was also described as cruel by Western humanitarians when the country tried to restrict its population growth with the introduction of a one-child policy. |
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Wanting to protect falconry as a sport, the government did not restrict the number of dogs that can be used to flush wild mammals for a bird of prey. |
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Even as vehicle tariffs fall in compliance with WTO rules, fuel economy standards will restrict imports of classic American light truck and luxury cars. |
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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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Instead of using technology to improve our lives and as a means to disseminate public information, it will be used to restrict our freedoms, and peer into our private lives. |
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At lunchtime, however, it seemed essential to restrict ourselves to salad and cheese, in order to be able to do justice to the full works come dinner. |
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Such road authorities are authorized to so design any controlled-access highway, and to so regulate, restrict or prohibit access as to best serve the traffic for which the highway is intended.
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The aim of this highly contentious policy is to restrict the numbers of expats who may otherwise end up settling in Bermuda on a more permanent basis. |
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Fourthly, the contract may contain exclusion clauses by virtue of which one party seeks to exclude or restrict a liability which he would otherwise owe to the other. |
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Has the Commission ever been forced to restrict the concentration of ownership in the trade in perishables in Europe? |
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There are many powerful forces at work here in the European Parliament looking to restrict the veto as far as possible. |
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The company should control and restrict the reuse of agrochemical bags and containers. |
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No medical condition should restrict an individual's eligibility for vasectomy or female sterilization. |
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When selecting heat, the system will restrict airflow until it has warmed to prevent cold air from blowing out of the vents. |
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These symptoms, in particular breathlessness, can restrict a person's ability to perform normal daily activities. |
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An agreement was reached with the privacy commissioner to restrict what analysts could view, blacking out certain fields on their screens. |
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It is necessary to restrict its use to common absinthes of low proof which will not support a great quantity of essence. |
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If the government cannot count upon widespread support for peaceful political procedures, it must restrict many kinds of political action. |
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A private member's bill has also been introduced in Parliament which, if passed, will greatly restrict the kinds of crimes that could result in a conditional sentence. |
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Most restrict themselves to the minutiae of local issues. The PRI still has a reputation for corruption and skulduggery. |
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The national governments and the EU restrict themselves to high-sounding declarations, while avoiding concrete measures. |
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But he ruled that the High Court order breached the principle of the separation of powers and would unduly restrict the Government in developing child care policy. |
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I asked him about this message given the efforts to restrict early voting and his overall sense of the ground game to date. |
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Neither is it the case that the Presidency wishes to unnecessarily restrict insight or debate in any respect. |
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The X-ray beam must be well-collimated to restrict it as much as is practicable to the area of diagnostic interest. |
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There are many forms of statute law which already restrict the activities of the press. |
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Hence, good management of this area needs to restrict harvests to small proportions of large standing stocks. |
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Rockweed forms a very stable cover in the intertidal zone but storms, ice action and pollution can reduce abundance or restrict its distribution. |
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As a chaperone, you have the right and privilege to restrict any visitors, athletes, anyone in your area at any time. |
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These barriers deter market entrants, restrict consumer choice and push up prices for consumers. |
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Protection schemes for vegetation coverage may restrict the use of natural resources and impinge upon national sovereignty. |
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Decades of economic stagnation and the fact that most resources are funneled through the state restrict people's opportunities to achieve social and economic mobility. |
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Therefore, extensive effort was made to restrict the review to the most useful and germane work and to organize it meaningfully. |
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Residency requirements are usually counterproductive, serving to restrict the quality of applicants for management and supervisory positions. |
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Another amendment would restrict sale of the morning-after pill. |
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And while on the subject of motifs, the artist, with his unlimited imagination, does not restrict himself to evoking cubism or a rigorous formality. |
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Human rights and advocacy organizations remain understandably troubled about the Government's intentions, concerned that its motives are to restrict rather than facilitate their activities. |
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The Commission concluded that this vertical link would not result in any anti-competitive effects as the merged entity would not have the ability to restrict its competitors' access to polyhydric alcohols. |
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Due to the complexity of the material and the short time available to me, I will restrict myself to a few recapitulatory statements which I consider essential and which I hope the Commission will take into due consideration. |
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You can systematically restrict the allowed values from level to level down the hierarchy, entering several values per level even for single-value characteristics. |
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Policies to restrict unhealthy food advertising, limit the number of outlets that sell unhealthy food, and reduce portion size have shown promise in some countries. |
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I voted for this report and in favour of amendments that allow Member States to take action to protect minors, to restrict the timing of alcohol advertising and the advertisements for unhealthy food. |
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The actors perceive, unclearly for the moment, a political determination to restrict the autonomy of the judicial sphere and to limit the sphere of influence of juvenile court judges. |
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There was no signage on Quabbin Road to warn that lowboy trailers would encounter clearance problems at the upcoming level crossing, nor were there signs to restrict this type of truck traffic from using this route. |
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In the balance of this article, we have dealt with common questions that arise for investors and we'll restrict our focus on capital gains and losses on publiclytraded securities. |
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Quantity limitations may be an indirect means to restrict passive sales. |
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Governments, often seeking to protect the beliefs, traditions, and ideology of the majority or dominant religion, took steps to restrict the rights of individuals to proselytize and to change their religion. |
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As its full implications have sunk in, some Member States have been quietly attempting to restrict the scope of its application and backpedal on its implications. |
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It is unreasonable to restrict the right to vote on the ground of physical disability or to impose literacy, educational or property requirements. |
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Fatigue, pain, balance problems, coordination problems, spasticity, numbness, sphincter control problems and being out of condition may all restrict your ability to do certain exercises. |
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However, swiss insurance companies may restrict cover for the countries displayed in green on the map by crossing out their country code on the Green Card. |
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Societal limitations would restrict women from entering eremitic life, and anchoretic life for women was rare. |
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The comments also state that the connection between weapons and crime is recognised as a problem all over the world, for which reason every effort should be made to restrict the ownership of weapons. |
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Nor is it usual to restrict their food intake during the laying period, because optimal physical development is necessary for good egg production. |
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Coming next to the effects of measures of this kind, one finds that both export subsidies and duties and other charges on imports tend to lower world market prices and restrict the markets for lowcost exporters. |
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It is the Canada Shipping Act that provides the legislative basis to restrict boating for reasons of public safety, protection of the marine environment, and public convenience. |
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The Police Ouvidorias, which exercise external control on the institution that monopolizes the use of force and may restrict the dearest individual freedoms must be absolutely trusted by the society. |
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Temperature inversions restrict vertical air mixing, which causes small suspended droplets to remain close to the ground and move laterally in a concentrated cloud. |
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If the delegation of Burundi was reluctant to accept the participation of non-governmental organizations, the Commission should restrict their participation to an informal presentation the previous day. |
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Or could the summarization of a set of constitutional rights and privileges that had developed over centuries restrict the very rights and privileges being asserted? |
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It has to be said that the banks have gone too far by making one promise after another that they fail to keep, content in their certainty that Brussels would not dare restrict their freedom to impose charges. |
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Likewise, the struggle to control exhaustible resources and obtain basic commodities at affordable prices raises the propensity to restrict trade in many countries. |
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Solid materials however have a tendency to be repelled by the ultrasonic, and should be processed in a vessel large enough to accommodate the probe, yet small enough to restrict sample movement. |
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A pneumatic tire is reinforced by layers of relatively inextensible cords that hold the air pressure and restrict deformation and growth of the tire during use. |
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It therefore takes the view that these restrictions have no legal force and cannot be used to restrict market entry for service providers or oust incumbents. |
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The aim is not to deregulate or to interfere with the executive's or the legislator's prerogatives, and certainly not to restrict the Community's freedom of action. |
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The proposed Directive grants additional emergency powers to the national authorities to restrict the use of leverage in respect of individual managers and funds in exceptional circumstances. |
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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. |
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I was also very happy to hear you say just now that you want to open the way for as many transplants as possible and do not want to restrict the numbers. |
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Then we talk about the question of individual countries or groups having their hands tied when they want to restrict the import of genetically modified seeds, plants, and food. |
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By reducing the quantity of substandard coffee being sold, quality controls help to restrict the supply of coffee to an already oversupplied international market. |
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There can be no doubt that setting up this quasi-European state, on the principles laid down in the Treaty, will significantly restrict genuine democracy, which will effectively become a democracy in name only. |
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Their complaint is that France Telecom uses a strategy intended to restrict the marketing of its cinematographic and sporting rights to its exclusive ADSL subscribers only. |
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Since it is impossible to restrict access to several of the methods used to attempt suicide, some authors emphasize the importance of the integration of various preventive measures. |
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Despite the use of the best technology, the limited number of available frequency bands will restrict the use of wireless communication in the media centre. |
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Forty-three stattorneys-generaleral have filed suits against the sweepstake promoters, and legislation to restrict their behaviour is now working its way through Congress and may reach the Senate floor this summer. |
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Acts of banditry targeted towards humanitarian convoys and personnel restrict the ability of humanitarian organizations to operate effectively and thus impinge on humanitarian conditions. |
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