Changes in thermal demand in restrictively fed, unadapted, young calves were studied during the first days after transportation. |
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A study of the next page of his judgment shows that he did not intend the expression to be interpreted quite so restrictively. |
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Accordingly, I find that all of the allegations in the statement of claim fall within the policy exceptions, even interpreted restrictively. |
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The right to freedom of assembly is one of the foundations of a democratic society and should not be interpreted restrictively. |
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The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms has cautioned the police to restrictively use their discretion in dealing with offenders. |
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And it's happening when fiscal policy is being tightened and the Australian dollar is restrictively high. |
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Accordingly, there may not be more cases of pretrial detention that the law restrictively and in a fairly detailed manner stipulates. |
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In addition, the Court applies this legislation scrupulously and restrictively. |
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The competent authority should in any case bear in mind the obligation to restrictively interpret the grounds for confidentiality. |
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The legislative history of the Act makes it clear that both grounds for dismissal must be used restrictively. |
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At the same time, the competing human rights need to be balanced and public interest limitations should be applied restrictively. |
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The panels in those cases construed Article XX so restrictively as to almost read it out of the GATT, or to marginalize it. |
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Compared to the previously-applied EU directives this new regulation defines maximum residue levels of some pesticides more restrictively. |
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A Daily Mail writer, wearing a facsimile of the dress, said it was sculpted to her body, but not restrictively so. |
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She would have to let herself breathe, after three weeks of wearing a restrictively tight undershirt, giving her the appearance of a scrawny, underfed little boy. |
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The concept of 'overriding mandatory provisions' should be distinguished from the expression 'provisions which cannot be derogated from by agreement' and should be construed more restrictively. |
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Shirts and trousers were of flannel, first becoming heavy with sweat, then wringing wet and finally virtually transparent, clinging restrictively to the body. |
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In its settled case-law, the Court of Justice has underlined that all exemptions have to be interpreted restrictively, since they are exceptions to the general rule which requires that VAT be levied on any economic activity. |
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Remember, companies that offer flex-spend benefits have always had leeway to define eligible expenses more restrictively than the government does. |
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Trade facilitation, for instance, could be interpreted restrictively if limited to a streamlining of Customs and possibly some other authorizing departments. |
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It follows from the settled case-law of the European Court of Justice that all exemptions have to be interpreted restrictively in order to respect the neutrality of the VAT system. |
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But that principle, when applied too restrictively and too mechanically, can produce unfortunate distortions, and I will have the opportunity to get back to that later. |
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In fact, bank credit tends to be pro-cyclical, that is to say it tends to behave restrictively when the economic situation is deteriorating, which causes the downslide to worsen even more. |
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In Germany, the wider term was a relatively recent importation, and was used rather more restrictively. |
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The inefficiencies of the Spanish state and the restrictively regulated industry under his rule were common to many contemporary countries. |
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There is no right of appeal against the decision of the Federal Council, and the procedural provisions may be applied restrictively for reasons of official secrecy. |
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Previously, the transfer of large media files to and from an offsite designer was restrictively slow and would overwhelm the network. |
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The Finnish Group stresses that the duration provision should be interpreted restrictively to avoid providing for perpetual protection of databases. |
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Since criminal law was interpreted restrictively in favour of the accused, the fact that discrimination was not specifically mentioned could be problematic. |
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Bureaucrats purposely wrote the regulations so restrictively that even the smallest changes would disqualify the policies. |
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They should therefore be interpreted restrictively, and no other reasons may be adduced by way of analogy to justify the withdrawal of refugee status. |
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The Swiss Group stresses that Swiss law already provides for relevant unfair competition rules to protect databases, but that courts need to interpret those provisions less restrictively. |
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But popular initiative allows a tiny proportion of the electorate to define, and sometimes to draft restrictively, the subject that will be put to the people. |
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