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156 Sentences With "narrowly defined"

How to use narrowly defined in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "narrowly defined" and check conjugation/comparative form for "narrowly defined". Mastering all the usages of "narrowly defined" from sentence examples published by news publications.

As currently scripted, Japanification is narrowly defined but broadly applied.
Will the NSC membership be expansive or more narrowly defined?
The Saudis are actually a great counter-terrorism partner narrowly defined.
The Freedom Act places more narrowly defined limitations on this federal surveillance.
Women tend to earn the same as men within narrowly defined occupations.
President Trump may claim "exoneration" on a narrowly defined criminal coordination charge.
The best of the three is actually the narrowly defined current deal.
Moreover, these narrowly defined costs are only one part of the picture.
Even so, this more narrowly defined alt-right may be a force.
This, called recursion, is what Mr Chomsky calls the language faculty "narrowly defined".
The first speaks, aided by a script, to narrowly defined, consensus political requirements.
Together, the two companies would control 95 percent of their narrowly defined market.
The older we get, our relationship needs are more complex and narrowly defined.
He said that Obama had "too narrowly defined" efforts to defeat the enemy.
But the inspector general's jurisdiction is narrowly defined and his resources are limited.
Before a lot of these teenagers came to Howard, blackness was narrowly defined.
But the American response also reflected its narrowly defined purpose in the Syrian conflict.
But this coverage tends to be much more narrowly defined compared to life insurance.
"Most travel insurance policies cover terrorism in very narrowly defined ways," Mr. Cook said.
Though they were sold in "family lots," family was narrowly defined: mother, father, children.
A deviation from its narrowly defined domestic policy role may also be rating negative.
" She laughs, and then pointedly says, "The music creation process can't be so narrowly defined.
In the real world, most situations are not organized around a single, narrowly defined goal.
Ms. Lempel introduces two entries, SURFER DUDE and NARROWLY DEFINED, as part of her theme.
That's because treason is actually a very narrowly defined crime that's awfully hard to commit.
But there are flaws in the reliance on narrowly defined expertise as an organizing concept.
For example, we don't know: The exact number of rides by market, broadly or narrowly defined.
The law was intended to give the president narrowly defined powers to sanction hostile foreign governments.
Most of the popular proposals focused on narrowly defined social issues, skirting broader questions of governance.
I don't think painting can be so narrowly defined as a brush-to-canvas discipline anymore.
" It's good, he says, to question "the presentation of narrowly defined sex roles within gay pornography.
Second, experts are prone to living their lives and practicing their crafts in narrowly defined cocoons.
And while many other states go beyond the minimum federal requirements, the circumstances are typically narrowly defined.
As a result, racism is often too narrowly defined as overt individual actions rather than systemic injustices.
For Pompeo, American patriotism and a narrowly defined brand of Christian pugilism are inextricable from one another.
In Afghanistan, "real men" can be narrowly defined by their ability to provide for and protect their families.
The word "merit," she writes, has come to mean "academic excellence, narrowly defined" as grades and test scores.
The rules of WTO engagement are narrowly defined and the United States has accordingly taken very precise aim.
Image: ScreenshotAs for computer science and the smartphones in your pocket, here AI tends to be more narrowly defined.
All this means that computers are now impressively competent at handling spoken requests that require a narrowly defined reply.
Level 4 AVs will stop operating if their narrowly defined operating rules no longer apply (think sudden snow squall).
But we discuss much less frequently the possibility that two such narrowly defined career paths might produce airless fiction.
He also forcefully rejected the notion that happiness and freedom — especially when narrowly defined as economic liberty — are interchangeable.
When I joined gun-control groups, I got messages about narrowly defined issues like background checks and safety locks.
Narrowly defined, "fake news" means a made-up story with an intention to deceive, often geared toward getting clicks.
"These [policies] tend to be more narrowly defined," said Cameron Congdon, North American client delivery leader at Willis Towers Watson.
The exceptions to free speech are narrowly defined, such as obscenity, some forms of incitement to violence, and child pornography.
"Free speech on campus is not limited to a 'free speech zone' or any other narrowly defined area," he said.
That law should require that criminal prosecution be a last resort against only clear violations of narrowly defined federal statutes.
Such products could only be sold abroad in narrowly defined circumstances, such as an international aid effort, the order said.
The scope of last week's agreement is narrowly defined, applying only to China's "Demonstration Bases - Common Service Platform (CSP)" policies.
One subsidiary would be a narrowly-defined bank, which would be well capitalized and engage in relatively low-risk activities.
Trump lawyers argue that emoluments should be narrowly defined as gifts and that payments in exchange for services don't constitute emoluments.
That approach is giving way to a new focus on privacy — narrowly defined to include only non-transgender women and girls.
For that reason, the American Disability Act generally prohibits discrimination against those who suffer from mental illnesses absent narrowly defined exceptions.
Tech jobs as typically reported in mainstream news are narrowly defined as computer science engineering occupations found only in Silicon Valley.
The State Department issued guidelines that narrowly defined those family relations as spouses, parents and parents-in-law, children and siblings.
Trauma, too, is often narrowly defined in these clinical settings as something rooted in distinct events that happened in the past.
The outcome of TC Heartland was that patent cases must now be brought in a more narrowly-defined set of courts.
Preferred admissions gives a narrowly defined group of black descendants a chance to compete for achievements that are defined by accumulated disadvantage.
Today's autonomous weapons are mostly static systems to shoot down incoming threats in self-defence, or missiles fired into narrowly defined areas.
The central bank is also apparently planning to limit the growth of the money supply, narrowly defined, to 8-10% this year.
He said countries should overcome their "narrowly-defined self-interest" and coordinate policies from the broader perspective of achieving sustainable economic growth.
As a result, the best place for biological scientists to find traction is with individuals who have highly heritable, narrowly defined problems.
Those with "close family" in the U.S. might still qualify, but officials narrowly defined the term: Grandparents, for instance, are not allowed.
For his part, Jenkins is careful not to flatten his characters into representatives of a narrowly defined community or point of view.
We spoke to experts to identify essential investing lessons learned by taking a look at some of the most narrowly defined fund options.
He amassed more than 6,000 followers on his official page, using Facebook ads to target voters in hundreds of narrowly defined demographic targets.
Mr. McCoy also applies 15-year-old evaluation criteria in areas like basic training that are more narrowly defined in current credit recommendations.
Another worry involves diminishing artistic experience, or "flattening," as Mr. Bailey put it, which can happen when films are narrowly defined and labeled.
The fund's performance underlines the risk of investing in narrowly defined and potentially volatile thematic funds, which may have higher than average costs.
The experience of many of those evangelicals illuminates how life issues have been narrowly defined by conservative evangelicals over the last 40 years.
And Democrats may be more willing to impose broader regulations on the industry while Republicans tend to favor a more narrowly defined approach.
The ruling, which reversed two hedge fund managers' convictions, also narrowly defined a benefit as something of "some consequence" and not just friendship.
Power is delegated to technocrats precisely because they are supposed to be neutral and can be easily held accountable against narrowly defined targets.
No longer confined by stereotypes that once narrowly defined their roles, black players are now explosive scorers, shutdown defenders, goalies and everything in between.
Under U.S. trade law, which is written to be consonant with our international agreements, the president can impose tariffs under certain narrowly defined conditions.
Lawful justifications for such killings are very narrowly defined and it is hard to imagine how any of these can apply to these killings.
Such people would also likely roll their eyes at the report's defense of the positive role of "safe spaces" (very narrowly defined) on campus.
The result delighted customers — Mr. Slimane's Saint Laurent sold well — but frustrated some critics with its unwavering commitment to a narrowly defined rock look.
Although machines have proven to have superhuman abilities in narrowly defined tasks (like playing Go), integrating several tasks into one machine has been slow coming.
Freedom of the sea is the centuries-old concept that the sea belongs to everyone and no one, with few, minor and narrowly defined exceptions.
The distinction is significant because, at the time, California law narrowly defined rape as "an act of sexual intercourse" under duress or lack of consent.
"Beauty was very narrowly defined for a very long time," said Sarah Brown, an editor and consultant who was the longtime beauty director of Vogue.
In Trump's worldview, American national interest – narrowly defined – comes first and America's role as a superpower is no longer to promote a liberal world order.
Even the jungles that they're in are narrowly defined so they were sort of like big cages ... So, you know, that's one possible outcome for us.
As a result robots are poised to march off the assembly lines where they perform narrowly defined repetitive tasks and into the wider world of work.
Treason is narrowly defined in the Constitution for a good reason, and its promiscuous misuse only helps the president's defenders paint opponents as hysterics and ignoramuses.
Under the Senate bill, patients with "a life-threatening disease or condition" could obtain unapproved drugs, but eligibility under the House bill was more narrowly defined.
These goals cannot be achieved without educational institutions that also produce researchers, innovators, and creative problem-solvers, in addition to people with narrowly defined technical skills.
Nude tights (and lingerie) are definitely not created equal — "nude" tends to be quite narrowly defined as a few fleshy shades that are on the paler side.
Sample problem: It had analyzed as a market a slice of the TV business so narrowly defined that it excluded Netflix and the other new(ish) providers.
An emphasis on women's empowerment and digital inclusion — in addition to more narrowly defined U.S. economic and military interests — will positively distinguish America's digital engagement from China's.
It centers queer people and queer ways of being beautiful, especially in a political context where beauty is narrowly defined or what's considered important or valuable is narrowly defined, and drag always offers a different option, or a variety of different options… I took for granted how much drag is still about play, and how playing and being light about your identity and yourself is actually a form of resistance, too.
As migration becomes much more transitory and politically charged, Asian-American politics should be working on opening borders instead of closing off the existing, already narrowly-defined citizenship.
I can't find the original puzzle, but the change to this version was the inclusion of NARROWLY DEFINED in the middle, which I wasn't exactly thrilled with either.
Some environmentalists say the order is too narrowly defined to be effective because it bans just the sale of fireworks, which can still be purchased in neighboring states.
But as the slower-than-promised progress on autonomous driving shows, AI is best at narrowly defined and controlled tasks, and rich real world situations can be challenging.
Could it be that within this narrowly-defined phenomenon there are clues for what causes schizophrenia, how to predict who will develop it, and potentially how to treat it?
And the White House's "narrowly defined list" of bona fide relations is "the antithesis of common sense" that "finds no support in the careful language of the Supreme Court".
Such narrowly defined objectives remain the least bad approach from the United States' perspective, even as they require Americans to tolerate the intolerable from a moral and humanitarian perspective.
In the most narrowly defined Western canon, the fascist overlords of dystopian states get challenged by people of the land, farmboys who believe in and benefit from deeper cultural ideals.
In Rockaway Beach as narrowly defined, colonials, Cape Cods and Victorians mix with two-families, condominiums and co-ops built alongside bungalows that imbue the neighborhood with a castaway spirit.
In fact, one could argue that while an Ivy League school provides a wonderful education in the law, it quite often sets a person on a narrowly defined career path.
Romine is not the hitter Sanchez is, but his role as a backup catcher is more narrowly defined, and he was thrilled to hear about Gray's unqualified faith in him.
Historically, many security-related start-ups have focused on inventing significant new technologies that address narrowly-defined threat exposures — suspect user behavior, ransomware attacks, or honeypot-driven deception tricks, for example.
That is precisely why the Framers, and later courts, have narrowly defined this crime and why relatively few treason cases have been brought and even fewer have succeeded in this country.
Most colleges and universities require that freshmen and other new students attend orientation workshops to familiarize them with guidelines for consent, a term that is often narrowly defined to avoid confusion.
This is in part, he said, because the two petitioners narrowly defined solar manufacturers in the case, excluding companies that make solar panels using exported cells or producers of solar tracking equipment.
However, it should be narrowly defined as instances when the speaker intends to goad those who agree with him to commit violence, and when his words are likely to have an immediate effect.
But what's the problem with art which appeals to the whole experience of life — mind, body, and soul — and draws from ideas and sources beyond a narrowly defined set of parameters and concerns?
While the ECB will be able to use its platform to highlight the financial risks associated with climate change, its narrowly defined mandate of fighting inflation will limit what Lagarde can actually do.
As long as Republicans are viewed as out-of-touch elites, simply fighting for different special interests than the Democrats, voters will be tempted to embrace the candidate who extols their interests, narrowly defined.
In this Text-to-Text we pair Milton's poem with Frank Bruni's Op-Ed "Today's Exhausted Superkids," which discusses the high costs of following the narrowly defined and proscribed path to an elite college.
Beyond that, co-founder and CEO Brian Fenty said that a little over 10% of the tickets sold now fall outside "theater and performing arts, narrowly defined," covering things like comedy shows and experiential theater.
Under the Trump administration, that has begun to change — in an echo of the Cold War, narrowly defined national security concerns increasingly occupy center stage, with fear of invading migrants replacing fear of invading Communists.
"The business community needs to move beyond ideology, needs to move beyond party, needs to move beyond narrowly defined corporate self-interests and understand that we've got to create a foundation of social stability," Hutchins argued.
But as we found in the report, conspiracy is very narrowly defined: It requires proof of an agreement between two or more people to commit a crime, and an "overt act" in furtherance of that agreement.
The Supreme Court unanimously ruled that government officials can only be convicted of corruption if they make narrowly defined "official acts" on behalf of their donors, making it harder for federal prosecutors to bring such cases.
The report also said Congress should give the F.D.A. authority to allow imports of medicines in narrowly defined circumstances, when consumers face sharp, sudden increases in the price of off-patent drugs that have no competition.
Instead of relying on multilateral institutions that have been pillars of world trade — and American power — since World War II, the president vowed to revise America's approach, stressing bilateral costs and benefits, and national security, very narrowly defined.
China has already made it a little easier for international asset managers to operate investment funds in China and allowed big institutions like Citibank to establish toeholds in China's bond market by granting them narrowly defined trading licenses.
"Anytime we see women in powerful roles on-screen it challenges narrowly defined and antiquated views of leadership," said Stacy L. Smith, a communications professor at the University of Southern California, whose research focuses on diversity in media.
For the first two years, her team focussed mostly on programs that were narrowly defined, even though they could still affect thousands or millions of Americans: for instance, easing health-insurance enrollment, or helping veterans access education benefits.
It is odd that fact-checking was so narrowly defined when a narrow mandate served the interests of power, and that its brief has now expanded considerably at a time when an overly broad mandate serves those interests.
The special counsel's office narrowly defined a foreign conspiracy as requiring an explicit agreement of cooperation between two parties—something it did not find between Trump campaign officials and Russia, despite the former's willingness to receive the help.
Both project themselves as patriots, vigorously defending a narrowly defined Catholic Polish nation that is threatened on two fronts – by the corrupting influence of Western liberal elites, and by a wave of Islamic migrants and terrorists from the East.
For women in the workplace to adhere to this narrowly defined acceptable female image meant to see, understand and speak about their life not as it was, but as what it ought to be according to the party ideal.
Guidance issued in 230, under President Bill Clinton, further outlined that immigrants could be considered a public charge if they were "primarily dependent" on government benefits, but narrowly defined those benefits as cash assistance or long-term, institutionalized care.
The group, which has monitored Israel's occupation of the West Bank and incidents of violence and abuse by soldiers against Palestinians for 25 years, said the military's legal system was too narrowly defined and served to protect its own.
Westbrook is going supernova on a nightly basis, but Oklahoma City is also getting contributions from up and down the roster; everyone other than Westbrook just happens to be contributing within a narrowly-defined role that suits their particular talents.
Influential patient-advocacy groups insist that only now is the true prevalence of A.D.H.D. finally being recognized after being drastically underestimated — akin to the spike in autism diagnoses once the narrowly defined condition was broadened into a spectrum in the 1990s.
With so much tax-advantaged investment flowing into so many narrowly defined census tracts, the federal government has a significant, once-in-a-generation opportunity to kick-start economic development in some of the most underserved communities in the United States.
Christian Louboutin made a major impact a year ago when he announced that for him, "nude" would no longer be a narrowly-defined light beige shade, but instead be expanded to match the many "nudes" that exist on the skin tone spectrum.
You can either express your disapproval by punishing employees for what they did, on the grounds that the extra assistance they provided to a customer took extra time and reduced the employee's (narrowly defined) productivity, or you can celebrate and applaud their actions.
While Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg debate the dangers of artificial general intelligence, startups applying AI to more narrowly defined problems such as accelerating the performance of sales teams and improving the operating efficiency of manufacturing lines are building billion-dollar businesses.
Kehler says that the societal expectation for men to be sexual beasts "relies on our understandings of hypersexualised masculinity," which basically whittles away at the margins of manhood until the "ideal man" is so narrowly defined that few can meet its demands.
It has been my experience over a quarter-century of law enforcement experience that criminal motivations in mass killings often come down to these narrowly defined motivations: terrorism, hate, mental issues, anarchy, or a pursuit of the "rectification" of grievances and grudges.
It's often been the wrong question, mind you, as the iPad shows its strengths best when it's serving narrowly defined purposes and applications: a sketching pad for some, a comic book reader for others, and a great way to show off pictures for all.
The shifting electoral tide suggests a gradual transformation of India's underlying sense of national destiny, from being a pluralist country enriched by diversity to becoming a more narrowly defined Hindu rashtra, or state, in much the same way that secular Pakistan became an "Islamic" state.
First, she argued that Sanders' exclusive use of the term progressive is so narrowly defined as to make it unpopular with Democrats (she argued that Paul Wellstone, the late Minnesota progressive Democratic senator, Barack Obama and Joe Biden would not be progressive according to Sanders).
The Financial Times, for example, remarked on their joint preference for foreign policies based on the ruthless promotion of narrowly defined national interest; their political reliance on—or invention of—external threats (and internal ones, for that matter); and their common penchant for earthy language.
"What is striking to me is a subtle yet clear shift away from the rhetoric of pure American self-interest narrowly defined, as espoused by candidate Donald Trump," said Robert Danin, a former Middle East negotiator who is now at the Council on Foreign Relations.
"Massachusetts has permissibly chosen to prohibit a narrowly defined group of weapons used disproportionally in (mass shootings), while at the same time ensuring that law-abiding residents have access to a host of other firearms for self-defense and other lawful activities," the brief states.
What this means is that under current law a woman cannot use her Medicaid coverage to pay for an abortion; a provider cannot bill Medicaid for abortion services and Medicaid cannot reimburse a provider for abortion services, except for the three narrowly defined situations described above.
The demonstrations, which are widespread and amorphous, do not match the playbook that Western intelligence agencies have used to mount covert operations in Iran — namely, sustained resource-intense operations that focus on the narrowly defined and measurable goal of sabotaging the alleged nuclear weapons program, they say.
An alliance of true limited-government conservatives (think Rand and Ron Paul supporters) and nationalists who are fine with big government as long as it serves narrowly defined American interests (think Trumpistas' enthusiasm for Medicare, wall building and torture) has effectively sidelined most GOP supporters of activist leadership.
President Trump ran on a platform of "America first", an explicit and forceful rejection of the "American internationalism" that had governed American policy for much of the past 75 years, a world where America often acted "for the good of the order" rather than narrowly defined national interests.
"The new science redefining cancer as a large number of narrowly defined diseases and yielding therapeutic options for an expanding number of patients is rapidly transforming the oncology treatment landscape," Murray Aitken, executive director of the IMS Institute for Healthcare Informatics, which produced the report, said in a statement.
Medigap insurers have to issue a policy without regard to pre-existing conditions during the first six months of enrolling in Medicare Part B at age 65 or older, after an employer terminates retiree coverage, and after a brief trial period in a Medicare Advantage plan, and other narrowly defined circumstances.
When you add to that environment the presence of advertising firms that can now finally do what ad firms have long claimed to be able to do, namely to predictably and reliably engender a fairly tailored set of emotional reactions in a narrowly defined target audience, you get, well, today.
One of them, by Peter Huntoon, a professor emeritus at the University of Wyoming, said the problem was not so much Dr. Snelling's perspective, but the park's adherence to its "narrowly defined institutional mandate predicated in part on the fact that ours is a secular society as per our Constitution."
The DOL fiduciary rule that was killed earlier this year emphasized — both in the rule itself and especially in subsequent guidance — that the "best interest" of the clients should not be narrowly defined in terms of fees and investment returns but should also consider the broader portfolio and life situation of the client.
Trump presented a world view in which the interests of the United States were much more narrowly defined; in which only enemies that attack us directly, such as ISIS , merited a military response; and in which international agreements had to show more tangible benefits if the U.S. was to remain a party to them.
Ms. Lempel puts together a four-part theme set based on ARTOO DETOO's name, in that all four words or phrases have two Rs and two Ds: 17A: SURFER DUDE 26A: ROGER MUDD 41A: NARROWLY DEFINED 52A: REAR ENDED It's a fairly disparate list, which made it tough to crack the theme while solving, but that's why it's a Tuesday puzzle and not a Monday.
The problem lies in Reddit's own narrowly defined harassment policy, which addresses individuals only—harassment against whole groups or identities is not included:Harassment on Reddit is defined as systematic and/or continued actions to torment or demean someone in a way that would make a reasonable person conclude that reddit is not a safe platform to express their ideas or participate in the conversation, or fear for their safety or the safety of those around them.

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