Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

564 Sentences With "strictures"

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

Puberty is the beginning of being released from the strictures of childhood; menopause is the beginning of being released from the strictures of society's gaze.
It implies that Pence needs to put artificial strictures in place — strictures that could harm women's career opportunities — to keep himself from cheating on his wife.
Every society arranges strictures around the family, and often it's by looking at individual relationships that we see how and where those strictures failed and what might replace them.
Price could relax its strictures administratively but cannot abolish them.
When the band started, the xx imposed its own strictures.
Whatever his strictures on content, Péladan was agnostic about surface.
Open rebellion against hierarchical strictures is still rare and frowned upon.
Agreement under such strictures, noyb argues, should not be considered valid.
Democracy, many say, should be guided by religious strictures and nationalism.
Here, governmental action is replaced by the strictures of computer code.
Pershing, however, argued that Herbalife would collapse under the new operating strictures.
Free from the strictures of selling luxury goods, his imagination is unbound.
And all their mother's carefully concocted strictures unravel in a single vacation.
Evangelical churches have long objected to the strictures of the Johnson amendment.
Did he pay the families of players in violation of N.C.A.A. strictures?
Yet Iran continues to defy Germany's lax strictures in Merkel's own backyard.
This is not an exhortation to embrace religion in all its strictures.
Within a handful of strictures, The Legend of Zelda can be anything.
Offred bucks against the strictures that define her life in several ways.
But she was boxed in by the president's strictures and the Libyans' resistance.
But the monkey show tradition has withered under the strictures of contemporary China.
Drawing on her own experiences, Jackson often explored the strictures of gender roles.
The constitution's religious strictures were not fully enforced until the first world war.
Or, arguably, dressing out — out of the strictures and norms of traditional masculinity.
"American Smooth" sprang from Ms. Dove's interest in dance, its strictures and freedoms.
The president and vice president are exempt from many of the legal strictures.
As an adolescent, she had rebelled against its rigid and arbitrary-seeming strictures.
But Greenberg has never limited himself to the strictures of the drawing room.
Both have been eager for relief from the strictures of these spending caps.
She responds to the strictures and expectations as we might imagine anyone would.
At the time, though, those strictures did not always seem quite so funny.
An earlier version of this article imprecisely described strictures of the reconciliation process.
At times, however, the music reveals gaps between Aristotle's strictures and modern aesthetics.
The court rejected that argument, but his release comes amid strictures on his movements.
Social strictures keep young people in the dark when it comes to taboo topics.
Japan's government has struggled to convince citizens that the current strictures should be relaxed.
As so often in language, those looking for perfectly clear strictures will be disappointed.
If oil prices rise further, Mr Hamm's strictures on discipline may again be ignored.
But her strictures are meant as much for diffident voters as for the president.
But all these strictures do not seem to bind Mr Prayuth and his allies.
But in a country of high immigration, these strictures are causing unexpected political turmoil.
Painted objects float and careen without limitation (or the strictures of an art movement).
These technologies have unmoored people from their communities and removed once-sacred societal strictures.
Eight in 10 Republicans and Democrats support strictures on the mentally ill buying guns.
Many of the strictures will not go into effect until May of this year.
"Strictures inside the sperm swimming channel play a gate-like role," the authors explained.
Drawing primarily on the strictures and strangeness of the U.S.S.R., which collapsed on Dec.
By his late teens Kacey was pulling away from the strictures of his upbringing.
And: This is not a matter for government, given the strictures of the First Amendment.
But if the convention ignores such strictures, there might be no way to enforce them.
It's a pretty good one, though, and it keeps getting more fanciful within established strictures.
She was amazed, she told me, at the girls who played despite all the strictures.
Could this be the start of a major unfastening of the strictures she lives under?
Drug C prompts "confrontation," which supposedly helps the subjects to break through their psychological strictures.
Now Washington's adversaries are stronger militarily, and see that the old strictures no longer apply.
Now, in the midst of a pandemic, Germany is exempting European countries from budget strictures.
In his telling, outdated strictures on business and institutionalized hostility toward the wealthy hindered entrepreneurialism.
At the Bellevue, there were no religious strictures regarding swim attire but each woman's own.
I welcome these strictures as an invitation to expand my community and capacity for generosity.
The last thread most compels the director, Toa Fraser, to violate the strictures on perspective.
Policies vary widely, leaving some places in a virtual freeze and others with few strictures.
He gained modest relief from European spending strictures in part by pointing at his reforms.
It was still a delight, apparently, to reënact the lifting of strictures from oppressive times.
In the most egregious partisan gerrymanders, maps generally ignore some or all of those strictures.
Failure to heed such strictures can ultimately lead to fines running to several billions of euros.
Mr Trump resists such strictures, preferring a more freewheeling style, operating on instinct and gut feelings.
Unbound by the strictures of journalism, it can add context that traditional outlets can't or won't.
Pressure to shrug off pointless strictures is growing, as the court cases attest, but only slowly.
And as with Basel 3's previous strictures, the revisions will not take effect at once.
Exemptions from the pro-market strictures are allowed, though the commission must sign off on them.
The south has long been readier than the north to agitate against the strictures of caste.
Only for the closest family members and friends, and aggressively resistant to Instagram's usual aesthetic strictures.
Classical performers and venues are well advised to be rethinking inherited strictures of the recital hall.
And with Lynch and Frost untethered from network TV strictures, said deaths frequently happen pretty horribly.
No fancy equipment, no endorsements, no publicity; just freedom from the strictures of life in Poland.
As a private citizen, Giuliani was free to act outside the strictures of the Trump administration.
While the other actors obey the director's fairy-tale strictures, Kidman behaves like a real person.
Anyway, it's not just that element of mutually assured destruction that created baseball's etiquette-related strictures.
Most crimes and regulatory strictures turn on your knowledge that you've done, or are doing, something wrong.
Mr Trump's strictures may provide further impetus, says Sandy Vershbow, a former deputy secretary-general of NATO.
He loved standards but distrusted the strictures of the 21971-bar song form, and especially distrusted repetition.
Talented LGBT employees of such firms, especially those who are married, are put off by Singapore's strictures.
A poem intentionally creates meaning through strictures of linguistic form: rhyme, meter, rhythm, verse, sound, and more.
Despite these strictures, Japan has long had an army in all but name: the "Self-Defence Forces".
It's a cynical look not just at society and its structures and strictures, but at love itself.
The fiscal policy can't help either as a result of budget strictures and the soaring public debt.
I had no idea whether the absurd strictures were Maddy's, or conjured up by our loopy intermediaries.
So many strictures made for an imposing mountain, but one that was daring me to climb it.
Eastman captures at once society's dehumanizing coldness and the possibility of sustained, agile resistance to its strictures.
The strictures of the new monitoring group would not be legally binding for brands and factory owners.
And the strictures of the hunt for grants and tenure in science can sometimes act against creativity.
The result is a sharp critique of medieval social strictures, with stunning battle scenes, monsters and blood.
Those strictures have also applied to women's sports, which conservatives have opposed for a number of reasons.
Her neighbors were trying to re-create their lost caliphate, enforcing its strictures with fear and violence.
Americans professing the Islamic faith are a growing demographic with very specific investing needs tied to religious strictures.
Rewards, sanctions, and strictures are handed out, and the participants go back into the world for another week.
And while I took ballet, I didn't know how to dance beyond its strictures, its pliés and tendus.
True, casualty rates have fallen in recent weeks and security forces have loosened strictures on movement and communications.
What does it mean to be a heterodox believer, he wonders, within the strictures of an orthodox religion?
I was at once frustrated by Islam's nitpicky strictures on women's dress and embraced by its warm sisterhood.
From the secularists' point of view, though, both groups were seeking to impose their strictures on the population.
Such contracts allow physicians to opt out of Medicare's strictures and charge more than the amounts normally allowed.
Those who might be ambivalent about abortion should realize that these strictures can apply to them as well.
Ronsel has seen enough of the world and tasted enough freedom to find the strictures of home intolerable.
In 2018, that resistance has taken a different form, with women leading the change, pushing against sexist strictures.
Smith said the goal at older ballparks was to be respectful of strictures but not bound by them.
But little has changed when it comes to the legal and social strictures on women in Saudi society.
Prince Mohammed is also in favor of loosening some of the social strictures that trouble women and others.
Ours is a government of limited powers that must conform its behavior to the strictures of the Constitution.
Savinio's adulteration of old and new was highly influential in the postmodernist revolt against the strictures of formalism.
It is friendly with Iran (though so are Oman and Dubai, which are not subject to the same strictures).
Beginning in the late 1970s, however, China eased up on such strictures as it embarked upon landmark economic reforms.
In 1996 it deployed regulation that effectively blocked European companies from complying with U.S. strictures over Cuba and Iran.
"A lot of my friends would not have been happy" with the strictures of the university's academics, she said.
"This conduct reflects, at least, grossly negligent or reckless disregard of the strictures of the Fourth Amendment," Nathan wrote.
It's about a character and their partner deciding to rebel against the formal strictures like academies, universities, military, whatever.
Also, I was impressed that these enthusiasts seemed to be rattling the self-serious strictures of the scientific establishment.
Something about the strictures of the program, its imposing authority and alien regimentation, ignited my every instinct for panic.
The defiance of prohibition and other societal strictures were exemplified by bathtub gin, bootleggers, speakeasies, flappers and the Charleston.
And it's far from clear that even this Congress would go along with exempting churches from the amendment's strictures.
She brings to life the children's chafing between their freewheeling London environment, pressure to succeed and conservative family strictures.
It is at once incompatible with the strictures of domestic life and a condition of the poet-parent's sanity.
Jawlensky's precocious impatience with the strictures of representation was the only real constant in his early portraits and landscapes.
What's so horrifying about Sheeran is how he's genuinely talented, charming even, within the strictures of an awful genre.
The question is, what strictures will there be on him with respect with classified information and the grand jury?
America is almost halfway to meeting that target even before adopting many of the environmental strictures Barack Obama had envisaged.
He has also eased some social strictures, promising to end the ban on women drivers and restraining the religious police.
With such strictures multiplying under the government of Narendra Modi, a Hindu nationalist, entrepreneurs have sought new ways to profit.
A barrier island nine miles from Manhattan, Coney Island presented the ultimate break from the social strictures of daily life.
Soon Apple will slip the surly bonds of Earth, the strictures of time and space and be ready for launch.
What France needs, Mr. Macron asserts, is flexibility that can free entrepreneurs from the strictures of an outmoded labor code.
Machado remained fascinated by femininity and the strictures governing the lives of women — it's why he reminds me of Munro.
The men and the few women who came to the UpStairs Lounge were, in many ways, trapped by societal strictures.
But the fun of just making a Sphero move competed against the strictures of making it go someplace in particular.
She wonders what she could have done differently, and how she might have resisted the strictures of her insulated tribe.
Those strictures are set to get tighter in November when US sanctions on Iran's energy sales go back into effect.
Their courtship, though ardent, reveals the strictures of a class- and color-riven society that suffocates ambition and distorts desire.
Similarly, Yong-Ik Kim's art developed as a strong response to the strictures, discipline, and unobtrusiveness of the Dansaekhwa movement.
That apprehension persuaded George W. Bush to give India's nuclear-weapons programme a carve-out from the usual counter-proliferation strictures.
But it remains to be seen if Trump will be satisfied with his new device or the strictures of the presidency.
Conversely, the other teams remaining in the post-season have unshackled their ace relievers from the strictures of conventional closer usage.
The racial strictures and mysteries of the N.F.L. were confounding and long-lasting, and not just reserved for the quarterback position.
The Supreme Court partially struck down RFRA in 1997, finding its strictures with regard to state governments to exceed Congress's power.
But none of the major candidates in the elections last spring challenged the recent sharia strictures for fear of being ostracised.
Ever since, Espacio Aglutinador has been dedicated to showing inventive, challenging work free of the strictures of the official cultural apparatus.
He also wants to loosen the strictures on Saudi culture—opening cinemas, for example, in a kingdom where they are banned.
And fourthly, it is not known how keenly the Taliban want to return to the harsh Islamic strictures of their regime.
Then he ran up against the strictures of the Eurozone's stability and growth pact and was stymied in executing his agenda.
I can't tell you how many Catholics I know who are trying to work through the consequences of those sexual strictures.
Given the timing and the strictures, maybe it's no shock that a different host never turned up in the audition room.
It follows the strictures on travel from the Continent announced by Mr. Trump on Wednesday, which were widely criticized in Europe.
At most, regulatory strictures such as rules requiring landing slots to be forfeited if they aren't quickly used, could be relaxed.
Rather than confront the strictures of Greenberg's Modernist tropes, he allowed them to endure by substituting three-dimensional space for flatness.
Other American tech giants have made their peace in various ways with Beijing's strictures and conditions for operating in the country.
Its objective is to "restore the integrity of the community by removing dilapidated strictures and redeveloping abandoned properties," the website says.
And, as is often the case with art, the strictures of the form can inspire small-bore, tight-focus creative excellence.
Metts settled into his new life in the oil fields, reluctantly accommodating an array of strictures that he regarded as pointless.
Italy, the epicenter of the outbreak in Europe, has long sought relief from the budget strictures attendant to using the euro.
Despite these strictures, which are self-evident in the paintings, something happens on each canvas that distinguishes it from the others.
Graduating from the traditional strictures of marriage, however, does not have to translate into an end of intimacy or loss of love.
Across the board, Rainer's films are formally innovative and disinterested in the established strictures of narrative — which is to say, of cliché.
Rectal infection can mimic inflammatory bowel disease and lead to chronic and severe colon and rectal abnormalities such as fistulas and strictures.
Free from the bureaucratic and security strictures of U.S. government civilian operations, USIP's personnel remain longer, and range further, in conflict zones.
They are released from the strictures of time and regimented life — but the reference to Johnson's politics feels tenuous, if not forced.
He said regulators were working on revisions that would limit its application to smaller banks and loosen the strictures on larger banks.
Republicans sought Ms. Yellen's support for proposals to loosen or eliminate some strictures imposed on financial institutions after the 2008 financial crisis.
The staging suggests that the reborn Rusalka may not really be free, but is simply adapting to a new set of strictures.
Germans have been both fascinated and horrified by Mr. Trump's willingness to ignore the strictures of diplomacy when dealing with foreign leaders.
" The glacial breakdown of these strictures was accompanied by the rise and establishment of a particular stereotype, that of "the lady painter.
This makes competitive as well as administrative sense: clients may be drawn to fund managers who subject themselves to MiFID 2's strictures.
Colors are representative of the Russian Civil War and 'red' beats 'white'; images of Lenin are based upon the strictures of Orthodox iconography.
Even as they also typically have more stringent regulatory strictures (vs Internet businesses) on what they can do with customers' sensitive personal data.
Away from the song-like strictures of the existential music he makes under his given name, Spencer Radcliffe stretches out as Blithe Field.
Activists and diplomats have speculated that the arrests may have been aimed at appeasing conservative elements opposed to the relaxation of social strictures.
Both strictures are designed to remind these women of their dependence on the good graces of the American patriarchy, in very different ways.
These strictures are enforced under the EU's protected food-names scheme, which safeguards products made in a traditional fashion, tied to particular locations.
" For Alice, marriage to a dapper American man seems like the perfect escape from the strictures of her life in England — "New food!
He is meant, of course, to represent the voice of Joyce's Roman Catholic upbringing, of Ireland, of all the strictures Joyce strains against.
Some cities and states, however, can bring claims for money damages (depending on their statutes) outside of the strictures of consumer class actions.
If he further violates the confidentiality strictures he insisted upon and he agreed to, we will seek legal recourse on our client's behalf.
Few people thought that Mr. Mueller would draw no conclusion, and former prosecutors say that there were other ways to interpret department strictures.
The reasons include the weakening hold of religion on American life as well as a loosening of strictures against cremation by some denominations.
Or here's the part where I tell you that I resolved to do better, to push more against the strictures of the binary.
The Trump administration has said that it plans to loosen those strictures as part of a broader review of post-crisis financial regulation.
Even before the #MeToo explosion, women in conservative Christian circles have been pushing back against strictures that have often sidelined and silenced them.
Horizon Europe, the European Union's seven-year, multi-billion-euro research programme kicking off in 2021, is likely to have similar strictures on publication.
Indeed, Twitter said then that its rational for developing per country blocking was to minimize the strictures on free speech across its entire platform.
Blizzard has changed the art in World of Warcraft to comply with Chinese cultural norms and strictures, notably cutting out some goriness and skeletons.
It tells the story of five sisters who do everything they can, even commit suicide, to escape the strictures of an oppressive conservative society.
The third section can be read as a creative reaction against the strictures of the Mao era, and of the Cultural Revolution in particular.
Discussion of the Tiananmen Square protests, Taiwan's independence, and the rights of Tibetans is forbidden, and those who violate the strictures face harsh punishment.
And they find they're no longer sure of whether they can really function outside the Army's strictures, but going back isn't an option either.
The only thing asked of subjects is public observance of Islamic strictures and acquiescence in the absolute power of the sprawling Al Saud dynasty.
Texting freed a generation from the strictures and inconvenience (and awkwardness) of phone calls, while allowing people to be more loosely and constantly connected.
SINCE THE euro zone was first engulfed by a sovereign-debt crisis a decade ago, northern member states have dished out plenty of strictures.
Tech made no real rules, claiming the freedom from any strictures would be O.K. in what is the greatest experiment in human communications ever.
A "creative" job listing may lure you to pursue your destiny, freed from old social strictures — but also freed from traditional benefits and security.
Many young Israelis want a more egalitarian ceremony and freedom from the strictures of the rabbinical authorities leading to a surge in alternative weddings.
People aren't going to stop looking for love because of coronavirus—the strictures of coronavirus preparation have left them with little else to do.
No such strictures need apply to Mr. Currier's "Re-Formation," which is obviously intended for the concert stage and for contemplation rather than worship.
Edith Wharton's "The House of Mirth" would fit on that shelf, too, among all the other tragedies about women trapped by stifling social strictures.
It's a deep pleasure to see her shrug off such strictures and lavish her attention on the petty, the creepy and the galloping mad.
In it, 28 Afghan women tell of struggling for liberation from the isolation and strictures of the Taliban, and of often oppressive, patriarchal practices.
I suspect that has a lot to do with the strictures of my gender, the cultural code mandating how emotionally performative men should be.
In accordance with the strictures of Jewish law, he did not "swear" but rather "affirmed" the oath administered to him by the vice president.
Franken, who represents a state with many hunters and sportsmen, acknowledged that his position in favor of new gun strictures is irksome to some constituents.
But five days into the latest attempt to end the Syrian conflict, there are scant signs that Staffan de Mistura's strictures are making much difference.
Some families, whether out of financial strictures or simple lack of interest, are giving up the tooth fairy tradition or not introducing it at all.
"Our judgement is far-reaching," she writes, imagining an onlooker conditioned by the strictures of this regime assessing the contents of a fellow shopper's basket.
Such strictures could be wired into a revised agreement in order to address concerns about a race to the bottom in labour and environmental standards.
For Reichardt, that power continues to exist outside the strictures of Hollywood, which remains at a safe distance from her end of the Pacific coastline.
Once the envy of the world, U.S. research facilities have been on a steady slide downward for some time as a result of budgetary strictures.
Opponents see in his promotion of religious education, tighter laws on alcohol, and strictures on daily life an attempt to undermine the country's secular foundations.
In the book, she stands for the opposite of everything that the blossoming young women embody—she believes in strictures, tight bodices, whipping by cane.
In their thoughtful rendering of difficult women, these actresses underline the strictures of women's roles by casting them aside or having them violently torn off.
ATF justified its effort on the grounds that the bullet consisted of a "steel core" and therefore fell under the strictures of the 1986 law.
Democrats have been handed control of the House of Representatives, overturning a Republican majority and opening the door to all manner of strictures on Trump.
Indeed, Dodd-Frank has caused headaches for some middle-class people who have struggled to secure a loan or a mortgage because of its strictures.
Among other special rules around the hajj, there is a relaxation of some of Islam's modesty strictures: Women are not supposed to cover their faces.
Only a very few can see beyond the structures and strictures of their time, and Washington and Jefferson both did that in many other ways.
From university education to beauty standards, there have been widespread calls to decolonize our ideas and institutions, and shake off old colonial beliefs and strictures.
It's not that Ali was versed in Sun-Tzu, or Von Clausewitz, or Frantz Fanon in warring against the strictures and structures of white supremacy.
Shonda Rhimes, the creator of ABC hits like "Grey's Anatomy" and "Scandal," is looking forward to creating shows away from the strictures of network television.
That rule joins an earlier one that allowed businesses to join together to create "association health plans" that also evade the Affordable Care Act's strictures.
"I wish she was under arrest right now," he said, a statement that ignores how loose the strictures governing the behavior of drivers actually are.
By winning at least enough votes to force the world to listen, they have opened up space for Western voters to reject liberal strictures explicitly.
Her views, however, appear to conflict with those of Mr. Trump, who has called for the Fed to reduce its postcrisis strictures on the banks.
And I think if you start out with strictures that are not sustainable, you don't end up in a good place in a few months.
And I think if you start out with strictures that are not sustainable, you don't end up in a good place in a few months.
It has to comply with an array of European Union rules and other international strictures protecting wildlife habitat and the movement of people and goods.
Because of the strictures of the reconciliation process, the plan would not be allowed to add to deficits outside of a 10-year budget window.
"We have to do this trial in a fair and bipartisan way and I hope that Leader McConnell would obey those strictures," Mr. Schumer said.
China tightly regulates conversions of the renminbi into other currencies to keep exchange rates stable, and similar strictures are likely to bind the crypto-renminbi.
But as we are witnessing, democracy is not dead in the US and Trump is trapped by the strictures and limits of the president's office.
In 2013, he returned to Douar Hicher, where he told war stories at his favorite café (and violated the anti-smoking strictures of Al Qaeda).
"The format and the strictures of debating on a specific motion allow an audience to listen to two sides of a debate," Donvan told me.
There were Muslim models, and even supermodels, like the Somali-born Iman, but the strictures of their religion were given no respect on the runway.
In a prose work that describes painting as a hermetic art, de Chirico opposes the stream of inner experience to the strictures of academic formalism.
Mr. Quarles said at his confirmation hearing in July that the government should relax some of the strictures imposed on the financial industry since 2008.
But Mr Gray's strictures miss an important point: most young Corbynistas are not so much settled members of the middle class as frustrated would-be members.
The civil rights movement was, in some sense, a question of whether segregation was consistent with the strictures laid out in the Constitution, yes or no?
He also pushed the limits of "Fashion" and "Fame," writing songs with those titles and also thinking deeply about the possibilities and strictures of pop renown.
In K-12, the most promising applications of technology have been found most consistently in private and charter schools — freed from the strictures of teachers unions.
Since DOJ adopted its more aggressive policy, trial judges in other circuits have weighed which test to apply and how to interpret the strictures of each.
Many American critics of the INF's strictures cite Beijing's substantial missile arsenal, some 95 percent of which is thought to fall in the INF-proscribed category.
"We're out here trying to help people," he said, adding he worries about the impact ever-tighter strictures on e-cigarettes would have on his customers.
To put wonder at the center of our personal and political lives is not denialism, but a rebellion against the life-denying strictures of the present.
More interested in feeling than in formal issues, they rebelled against strictures of every kind, while many of their New York counterparts embraced a rigid geometry.
The kingdom's leadership has made much of how it has recently eased some strictures on women, though skeptics question the extent and durability of the reforms.
They call for new limits to the pursuit of individual prosperity and sweeping government control over investment—strictures some of them would welcome under any circumstances.
In Poland in the 1980s, as the country threw off the strictures of Communism, his father ran one of the first international-standard restaurants in Warsaw.
Indeed, the impact of these countless strictures is evident in the increasing consolidation and lack of competitiveness within the industry (that is, both insurers and provides).
She rejected arguments by officials that as well as religious strictures against women attending matches, they must be protected from male fans' bad language and behavior.
DC decided to create Vertigo to give such authors greater creative leeway (and freedom from the strictures of the moribund but still authoritative Comics Code Authority).
This abuse of abstraction, so to speak, in its adulteration of old and new, became precedent-setting for the postmodernist revolt against the strictures of formalism.
The crucial decision to involve the IMF in euro-area programmes was partly based on a need to get around the Maastricht treaty's "no bail-out" strictures.
However, I often found myself overlooking the framework of the exhibition, instead focusing on Martin's approach to painting, specifically painting with freedom from the strictures of taste.
It should follow some rules that are almost physical, with layers of magic paper and strictures for how different software elements like buttons and drawers should behave.
A small but growing number of ultra-Orthodox men serve in the army, often in bespoke units where religious strictures, such as sex segregation, can be maintained.
Jeon says this is "mosquito-net style" reform - similar to Deng Xiaoping's model - with limited foreign investment and market liberalization contained within firm strictures of state control.
As well as paying a monthly charge, enrollees must typically abide by certain strictures, such as abstaining from tobacco and illegal drug use, and regularly attending church.
Conservative elites have rationalized their position in ways that conform to the polite strictures of National Review editorials—that a bailout would create a moral hazard, etc.
Humanitarian observers said her plight illustrated the strictures women and girls live under in Saudi Arabia, whose culture is regulated by an intensely conservative branch of Islam.
Even Cashmere Cat—the producer Magnus August Høiberg, who's always shirked EDM's strictures for something a little more contorted—has gotten increasingly suctioned into pop music's wormhole.
Others, however, while also rich in history, may present cultural challenges for Americans, as in India, with its pervasive poverty, and Saudi Arabia, with its religious strictures.
So many of its characters remain recognizable—blustering desperadoes, who believe in their right to act outside the law and then impose rules and strictures on others.
The strictures of the euro took other options off the table: Crisis countries could not let their currency fall or lower interest rates or expand government spending.
The apps deliver curated partisan news feeds on what are effectively private social media platforms, free from the strictures and content guidelines imposed by Silicon Valley giants.
Shirin Aliabadi, an Iranian artist who gave expression to Iranian women navigating between their youthful, rebellious energy and the strictures of the Islamic Republic, died on Oct.
Moreover, because Québécois revolted against the strictures of the Roman Catholic Church in the 1960s, secularism is deeply ingrained and outward signs of religion can cause discomfort.
Although most of the debate is conducted in a rhetoric that is almost liturgical in its strictures, there is a growing space for differing points of view.
She began to question the patriarchal Salafist strictures that command adherents to obey the example of the prophet unquestioningly, and that seemed arranged particularly to suit men.
As a black, Muslim woman, subject to any number of externally imposed strictures, Kameelah Janan Rasheed does not adopt these avant-garde techniques for merely aesthetic purposes.
Mr. Trump has repeatedly said that he wants the Fed to loosen some of the regulatory strictures it has imposed in response to the 2008 financial crisis.
But college administrators have been chafing against the strictures imposed by the Education Department, said Daniel Swinton, a top official with the Association of Title IX Administrators.
The repertoire for Cinker is limited, though, by China's all-powerful government Shanghai Media Group, the conglomerate that controls movie distribution, and must obey the censor's strictures.
That reality, our correspondent writes, is palpable in the townships of Cape Town, where the African National Congress's housing policies have reinforced the geographic strictures of apartheid.
There's the panic that can come from learning to live outside the strictures of the laws set by the rabbis, even if you chafed against those laws.
The Factory Centre for Contemporary Art, in Ho Chi Minh City, was founded four years ago to provide a venue for artists whose work ventures beyond these strictures.
In My Favorite Thing Is Monsters, Emil Ferris avoids the strictures of any one genre, following the meandering mind of a 10-year-old obsessed with movie monsters.
The following seven photographers mark street photography's many contemporary directions and its ability to stay varied and continue to grow beyond the strictures of its most traditional tyrants.
Yet where this latest production -- which has already aired in the U.K. -- really shines is in capturing Jo's independence, as she chafes against the strictures of the time.
To avoid congressional strictures on aid, Reagan approved a convoluted plot, in which missiles were sold to Iran and the proceeds sent to the "freedom fighters" in Nicaragua.
Social norms and religious strictures created an environment where women can't speak out and are targeted when they take on public roles (like police officers and news anchors).
As old strictures break down in the face of streaming and other newish ways of watching TV, finding a way to stand out is more important than ever.
Chinese policymakers, following Mr. Xi's strictures, are unlikely to give ground, said Yun Sun, a policy expert at the Stimson Center in Washington who is currently visiting China.
Other readers have pegged Abbey as an unrepentant chauvinist and possessing more than a smidgen of sanctimony, wishing to impose on others his own rigid strictures for living.
But then one could just look at "Carousel Change," a painting that is languorously cool and yet intent about moving out from the strictures of the stretched canvas.
China has long prevented many American internet giants from providing services within its borders, and it has placed tight strictures on how other American technology firms can operate.
Hawk, for all his swagger, is actually weaker, someone who accepts the strictures of 1950s American life and gets his highs by his surreptitious defiance of societal mores.
The governing party, the African National Congress, built empires of new housing for black South Africans, but concentrated it in the townships, reinforcing the geographic strictures of apartheid.
As a black, Muslim woman, subject to any number of externally imposed strictures, Rasheed seems dissatisfied with the idea of adopting this freeing technique for merely aesthetic purposes.
Given the strictures of the salary cap, winning teams are investing heavily in a handful of players and relying on young, inexpensive players to fill out the roster.
One side presents the new initiatives as self-motivated change, while the other describes them as legally binding strictures that apply not just in New York but globally.
More than 2000 million Chinese people live in communities that have imposed strictures of some sort on residents' comings and goings, as officials try to contain the epidemic.
It's often led to a more freewheeling atmosphere, in which the president feels more comfortable to freely meet with people, knowing he's outside the strictures of official Washington.
" I like his strictures about sex talk: "Sex is an acceptable subject when it is about other people, kind, funny, and spoken of with an air of astonishment.
Drawn largely from the city's affluent neighborhoods, they sat in rapt attention, dressed in bright patterned tunics, listening to the lecturer, Sara Asif, instruct them on Islamic strictures.
But his broader room for manoeuvre may be hemmed in by the strictures of the EPRDF, the rebel coalition that took over from the Derg military regime in 1991.
The insurgents still sow fear in the north among Muslims, whom they force to obey Islamic strictures, and Christians, who suffered a series of murders in February and March.
It would give her a personal mandate while releasing her from the strictures of David Cameron's 2015 manifesto, which has already caused her to retract a proposed tax increase.
Reinhardt and his band smirk as they read a list of strictures: no blues, no more than 5% syncopation, no solos lasting more than five seconds, and so on.
To impose any of those strictures, even on people with mental illnesses, would limit the inalienable rights of all citizens — making many answer for the actions of the few.
Vierra's plight yet again illustrates the severe strictures women and girls live under in Saudi Arabia, where only recently were women allowed to drive and go to sporting events.
The murder of Washington Post columnist Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul sparked international criticism of the crown prince, who had won Western plaudits for easing social strictures.
Some branches have indicated an intention to cut few or no members, according to people briefed on the plans, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of confidentiality strictures.
"Am I a Jo or an Amy?" is as pleasurable a question to consider, as it is revealing of the tight strictures that govern our understanding of womanly selfhood.
Trump administration officials leave next week for a second round of international trips to get partners on board with its broader strategy of increased sanctions and strictures on Iran.
Part of Warhol's allure in 2019 is his having flouted so many barriers — the strictures in what then constituted fine art and those of American society — with heroic chutzpa.
After 1870, however, Marx relaxed these strictures, in part because the failure of the Paris Commune left him dismayed at the prospects for a Communist revolution in the West.
It was once thought that the availability of abortifacient drugs would allow women to avoid the strictures of anti-abortion laws, but these methods are now being targeted, too.
Her latest swipe comes as Trump has begun to chafe at the advice of public health experts, who warn that relaxing social distancing strictures prematurely could have catastrophic consequences.
On Wednesday, before Thursday night's violation, Calipari blamed the tight strictures of the old box for one of the most infamous coach's box technical fouls in the college game.
Before his mother left Hungary, her best known work had been with Kolinda, a band blending folk traditions from across Eastern Europe in a tacit rejection of political strictures.
What she's most angry about, it turns out, are her own unfulfilled dreams of artistic genius, and the social strictures that pressure her to swallow them and behave herself.
Yet even now Iran is under looser nuclear strictures than South Korea, and would have been allowed to enrich as much material as it liked once the deal expired.
But Brazil's leaders have been lax about enforcing the strictures, and in the Amazon conservationists and indigenous-rights activists have struggled to contain a scramble for land and fortune.
A person who helped arrange the deal, speaking on the condition of anonymity to comply with confidentiality strictures, said ITV's minority investment gives Blumhouse Television an $80 million valuation.
If he further violates the confidentiality strictures he insisted upon and he agreed to, he will leave our client no choice but to seek legal recourse on her behalf.
Many Turks have grown tired of his imperial behavior, are uncomfortable with his imposition of Islamic strictures on a secular state and are disturbed by signs of economic weakening.
The country had only been in the conflict for 19 months, but it had already adjusted to the rhythms and strictures of a society on a total-war footing.
Harry Craddock, the longest serving head bartender at The American Bar at the Savoy Hotel, perfected the drink for his American customers fleeing the strictures of Prohibition in the 1920s.
She struggled with accepting the confidentiality strictures that are common in workplace settlements and considered taking the case to trial or writing a book about her experiences, the people said.
It is easy to recognize the picture as assuredly maternal, but it also slowly dawns on the viewer that this person is ungendered, muddling views dictated by rigid gender strictures.
But more than five years into the Syrian crisis, there are signs that the government may relax some of its strictures, particularly if its own citizens can see some benefit.
California is the seventh state to repeal family caps since 2002 on the basis of studies showing that the strictures have had no effect on the birthrates of welfare mothers.
It is also serving to announce the entrance of the new Michelle Obama into public life, a Michelle Obama who had been freed from the strictures of the White House.
Whereas Heilmann was undoing the strictures and seriousness that were considered integral to geometric abstraction and Minimalism, Korneffel doesn't feel that kind of pressure, and is clearly after something else.
Patel, however, defended the RBI's actions with him at the helm including the large fines and strictures on bank management, which were imposed for under-reporting NPAs and regulatory violations.
Mr. Powell also has well-established views on financial regulation, a crucial issue as the Trump administration seeks to loosen the strictures imposed on the industry after the 2008 crisis.
Though it has changed over the years to relax its strictures on musicians themselves, the ban on dancing has withstood multiple attempts at repeal since its institution the Prohibition era.
And yet these strictures seem to have freed him to revel in the full spectrum: hot pinks, crimsons and violets, browns, greens and black, and their impact on one another.
Many Saudis remain deeply conservative, and social strictures like the driving ban have been reinforced over the years by the kingdom's top clerics, many of them on the government payroll.
Like Andrea Camilleri's Montalbano novels, set in a Sicilian seaport, Mr. Walker's books are rich in atmosphere and personality, with characters bound by the tenacious strictures of history and memory.
The fall of Mr. Renzi creates an opening for the populist Five Star Movement, a party that seeks to free Italy of the euro and its strictures on government spending.
Ralph Northam (D) went on a local radio station and tried to explain his support for legislation that would have loosened current strictures on late-term abortions in the commonwealth.
She struggled with accepting the confidentiality strictures that are common in workplace settlements and considered taking the case to trial or writing a book about her experiences, the people said.
So there's something slightly rebellious and restive about making absurd, potentially inedible food out of a few carelessly slapped-together ingredients, defying the strictures of centuries of elaborate Chinese cooking.
Mr. Right, Right Now came out in the era of The Rules, with its fervent strictures against women ever calling a man first or suggesting that they were seeking a commitment.
Not only does it allow children to experiment with responsibility, freedom and risk away from the strictures of adults, but by making up worlds and scenarios, children improve certain cognitive functions.
North Korea is already among the most heavily sanctioned nations, facing numerous strictures to limit its ability to conduct commerce, participate in international finance and trade in weapons and other contraband.
Populist policies vary as a result: a left-wing firebrand might attack the budget strictures imposed by European institutions, whereas a right-winger might focus on ending free movement of labour.
In 2011 Mr Bolton wrote a Wall Street Journal op-ed which called for either "multilateralising" the INF—that is, getting other countries to abide by its strictures—or abandoning it.
But whether that is because of the programmes, or because women capable of complying with the strictures that prison-nursery programmes impose were heading down the right path anyway, is unclear.
He has repeatedly predicted a populist victory in next month's ballot that will transform the outlook of the commission and prompt a relaxation of the fiscal strictures that weigh on Italy.
As for fiscal flexibility, Italy remains bound by the euro zone's strictures and neither the European Commission nor the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, look ready to cut Mr Renzi significant slack.
READ: Google Doodle celebrates women's dreams Women in public leadership run a perpetual gauntlet of expectations, demands and strictures which men (especially white straight men) simply are never forced to face.
Introduced in a country facing the worst overdose crisis in history, it was not surprising that what was intended as a set of recommendations rapidly hardened into legal and insurance strictures.
There are also strictures some states put on voting -- most notably voter ID. There are 34 states where voters have to show some sort of photo ID in order to vote.
Mr Boot attracted some vociferous responses to his strictures about "cultural, social and gender history" but I'm sure his explanation applies just as well to Britain as it does to America.
"I was at once frustrated by Islam's nitpicky strictures on women's dress and embraced by its warm sisterhood," our reporter Diaa Hadid says of her pilgrimage to Mecca in Saudi Arabia.
Moreover, the self-made class has thrived because the government left it alone and those individuals have come to resent some of the strictures imposed by the party and the state.
In the new job, Mr. Pompeo would no longer be constrained by the strictures of impartial intelligence analysis, a development likely to thrill his conservative political allies and alarm his critics.
Not only is Jerusalem central to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, there is also friction between ultra-Orthodox residents and a dwindling Jewish secular community that often feels stifled by religious strictures.
Peck was living with ballet, feeling its demands and strictures in his body during the day and having his mind freed by it at night when he went to see it.
Backing away from maximum pressure and abiding by constitutional strictures on presidential war powers would both be useful in assuring Tehran of this administration&aposs intent to negotiate in good faith.
The print reveals not only the majesty she attains in black and white but also the physical and conceptual freedom she found by leaving behind the strictures of her architectural tracings.
The government has loosened a number of the key strictures imposed on banks and other financial firms in the wake of the 2008 crisis, and more leniencies are in the pipeline.
The end of the Iran–Iraq war in 1988 and Khomeini's death shortly after loosened the strictures, allowing for traditional folk and classical broadcasts on state-run television and radio stations.
By privileging sound Hejinian resists rigid strictures of meaning, foregrounding physical aspects of language (such as raw sound, a vibration felt in the body and/or heard by ear) shared by all.
If the merman is representative of the possibilities existing beyond society's strictures (who would think the Amazon River harbored a fish-man?), Strickland is a representative of his specific time and place.
Maybe this is appropriate, since the play comments implicitly on the strictures that all artists — indeed, all citizens — in Iran and other authoritarian states must confront and negotiate on a daily basis.
While every woman fears intrusion into her personal life from her online presence, these anxieties are amplified for sex workers, particularly as viable internet options get closed down by new government strictures.
The leases grew in length from four pages to 18 to 43 as the companies doubled down on strictures and transferred more responsibilities — mold remediation, landscaping, carbon-monoxide detectors — onto the renter.
They've also led the charge to get festivals to sign a Film Festival Survival Pledge,which releases creators from some of the strictures against online screening for the duration of the crisis.
Religious strictures are particularly influential in shaping Saudi society, tightly limiting the role of women, enforcing rigid public morality rules and battling some government efforts to modernize the legal and education systems.
Much as the narrator might like to remove the strictures of these power relations and escape into something more spontaneous, she's trapped by her own inability to trust the people around her.
Helena, once a promising painter, is relegated to the role of artistic enabler, welcoming talented "strays" into her home to liberate them from the strictures of convention that still subtly bind her.
In case it wasn't already clear, the insurgent freshmen who promised bold and uncompromising action, uninterested in and unbowed by the strictures of the status quo, are showing no signs of wavering.
Unfolding around a pivotal moment in the contest, it examined how the strictures of her gender and the baggage of her marriage affected her ability to navigate the men's world of politics.
Consistent with her methodological mission, Nochlin is less interested in the specifics of Bonheur's work than she is in analyzing how the artist navigated the artistic and institutional strictures of her time.
But to achieve such growth levels, experts here say, particularly in an era of low oil prices, would require an easing of financial strictures that Iran's conservative leaders show no signs of tolerating.
Many states still banned bouts between white and black fighters, although other ethnicities did not seem to come under as much strictures and scrutiny as the fight between the white and black races.
Confined to their grandmother's house, the girls bridle against losing their freedoms in a story grounded in both laughter and tears, and in the resilient strength of these girls against soul-deadening strictures.
The real issue is that the country is "condemned to perpetual economic stagnation within the strictures of the euro zone," he said, suggesting that recapitalizing the Italian banks will not solve their problems.
They will have to deal with one another to forge a solution to the tenuous financial status of New Jersey's pension funding in a way that comports with the strictures of our Constitution.
"If we can't solve this, then I think we should seriously look at some kind of firm legal strictures that are equivalent to the prosecution of insider trading," Fisher said in the transcripts.
In 2015, he made a record that demonstrated the power of this technique, and it vaulted him to the forefront of a generation of jazz musicians playing with the strictures of the form.
Russia has signed but has not ratified the Paris Agreement, making it the only major emitter outside the pact (though President Donald Trump is in the process of withdrawing America from its strictures).
In the United States and Britain, working people have suffered joblessness and declining living standards while political leaders have prescribed policies that have enriched the elite — more trade deals, fewer strictures on bankers.
In contrast, liberals tend to view the world as a place where success is achieved by casting off the strictures of society and allowing individuals to achieve their true potential through self-expression.
"If he further violates the confidentiality strictures he insisted upon and he agreed to, he will leave our client no choice but to seek legal recourse on her behalf," said attorney Alexis Ronickher.
They noticed weaker sperm got caught in currents at the gates -- or "strictures" -- while the fastest and strongest swimmers were able to withstand the oncoming flow and force their way through the opening.
Russia has signed but has not ratified the Paris agreement, making it the only large emitter outside the pact (though President Donald Trump has said he intends to withdraw America from its strictures).
At Hermès, Nadège Vanhee-Cybulski tried to break out of the strictures of good taste that have been smothering her since she arrived, mining the 1960s and '70s for her mustards and greens.
Korean B-girls have a presence too, but in much smaller numbers because of rigid social strictures that ask them to work and raise families, all while adhering to unrealistic standards of beauty.
Revived in an era of wellness retreats and digital detoxes, ancient Jewish rituals like Shabbat and Rosh Chodesh celebrations have found a sudden resonance unattached from the strictures of the tradition that invented them.
Justin McClellan, the firm's chief marketing officer, hopes the strictures on observers will change next year—indeed, he expects a general relaxation of the rules, not just for GreenSight, but also for its competitors.
The United States, on the other hand, has gotten so bogged down in the strictures of an outdated regulatory system that it is lagging far behind — and is likely to continue to do so.
It makes a little bit of sense: the strictures of iOS and the App Store are why a years-old iPad is vastly more responsive and cruft-free than a similarly aged MacBook Pro.
One of the likeliest quick changes would be an immediate return to a 10-film field of best picture nominees, said the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of confidentiality strictures.
However, the constantly shifting style of Emil Ferris's debut graphic novel allows it to avoid the strictures of any one genre, allowing it to pivot between seemingly divergent storylines with great ease and efficacy.
Detailing the mythical origins of humor, and the genitals' seminal role in everything we now call comedy, the essay drives home the hilarity of attaching strictures and stigmas to ubiquitous pieces of biological necessity.
It's the sound of Scott moving further away from the strictures of the Baptist Church in which she was raised and with which she grappled on her her first two albums, Torres and Sprinter.
But continuing to maintain the balance between the strictures of an ancient religion and the demands of a 21st century economy is proving increasingly difficult—even for a political operator of Mr Netanyahu's calibre.
In premodern life, the middle people weren't so poor as to be stuck permanently in misery, but neither were they bound by the social codes and strictures of nobility that tended to accompany wealth.
For many average Saudis, he is what they have been waiting for: a strong ruler loosening the chokehold of ultraconservative religious strictures while working to wean the kingdom off of its oil-based economy.
It is not a great surprise that their idols are those who lived and worked on the outskirts of fashion, who have similarly struggled with fitting themselves into the strictures of the industry machine.
Mr. Erdogan — who served as Turkey's prime minister for 11 years before becoming its president in 2014 — forged his political career as an Islamist intent on challenging the strictures of Turkey's state-imposed secularism.
It is the first time in the history of the European Union that the clause has been used, throwing out the window the strictures of fiscal orthodoxy that stipulate low deficits and small debts.
Representative Tim Ryan, Democrat of Ohio and a prominent critic of Ms. Pelosi, argued that Republicans had not abided by such strictures of fiscal discipline, so Democrats shouldn't impose a straitjacket on their ambitions.
They suggest she was struggling, frightened, trying to invent an image-language that reflected her vulnerability and the bruises she'd sustained trying to wedge her work into the rigid strictures of the art world.
A U.S.D.A. advisory board in November unanimously recommended that standards for organic foods exclude gene-edited crops even if they were grown without chemical fertilizers and abided by the other strictures of organic farming.
The show is hardly groundbreaking, and its collective charms are relatively modest; nevertheless, overall themes appear pretty universal, focusing on quiet lives of desperation and tiptoeing up to the societal strictures that govern them.
Nassir is one of those celebrated Iranian painters from a generation that stands at the transitional moment between the strictures of modern art and the precariousness of the contemporary moment, probably indulging in both.
The celebrated avant-garde composer Toshi Ichiyanagi released a 1963 piece called Music for Tinguely that modulates ominous sonic sheets of clinking metal and glass, freeing music-making from the strictures of traditional songwriting.
The camera never shies away, and the gooey ear-tearing sounds are turned up to the max, daring the viewer to look away from the measures this woman takes to escape the strictures of Gilead.
A widely read German magazine called the Italian founding leader of the soaring Five Star Movement "the most dangerous man in Europe" for his refusal of Berlin/Brussels strictures and German meddling in Italian affairs.
People pay dues to the private club of the president of the United States, then try to influence him in person on government policy — all outside the normal watchdogs and strictures and surveillance of Washington.
In publishing annual recommendations for economic policy in the bloc's 28 member states, the European Commission did not refer to the appointment of a new coalition in Rome that is sceptical of euro zone strictures.
They have been spurred on by the powerful taxicab industry, which does not welcome competition from services offering lower fares and greater convenience while avoiding some of the government-imposed strictures traditional cab drivers face.
Germany has been adamant that these strictures be applied, rebuffing a recent attempt by the Italian prime minister, Matteo Renzi, to secure an exemption allowing him to inject taxpayer money into the Italian banking system.
The grisly killing and dismembering of Melendez gave credence to Giuliani's agenda of pushing the idea that terrible things can happen because of nightclubs, and that therefore, we needed way tighter strictures on nocturnal behavior.
But here's the ... He wants to remove the regulation, that's one of his most popular stances is the idea of removing regulation, removing oversight, removing any kind of strictures against these companies and their growth.
I really liked the idea, but the construction, which needed to place the diagonals within the strictures of a symmetrical grid while including a large number of triple-checked letters, was very hard to manage.
Mr. Nézet-Séguin's aim for the Met, he said, was a new era of optimism through a "quiet revolution," an allusion to a 1960s social movement in Quebec against the strictures of the Catholic Church.
Like every other branch of the military, the Marine Corps has official strictures against hazing, which it defines as any unauthorized verbal or physical conduct of a ''cruel, abusive, humiliating, oppressive, demeaning or harmful'' nature.
And I don't think they ought to be treated like a utility where they'll have a guaranteed rate of profit and have the government ... With the strictures of what, say, Comcast has on them, right?
Richter's analogue in the film is Kurt Barnert (played by Tom Schilling), who from a young age is encouraged by his aunt Elisabeth (Saskia Rosendahl) to ignore Nazi strictures about art and follow his own passions.
It did not just put at risk a well-crafted plan that genuinely constrained Iran's nuclear capacity and put in place unprecedented limits and safeguards—strictures from which Iran could now walk away at any time.
For all the freedom it offers from gallery strictures, eBay comes with its own constraints  — a conceptual (as opposed to material) piece still needs to be framed to function in, or respond to, a sales setting.
Mechanisms it is considering include asking banks and other financial firms — or senior staff members — to "attest" that their businesses will observe the code, which bans dealers from lying and starting false rumours, among other strictures.
The settlers are pushing for legislation that would force Palestinian owners to accept compensation rather than get their land back, arguing that the current legal strictures could be applied to thousands of settler homes beyond Amona.
More likely, said these people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to comply with confidentiality strictures, the boutique movie and television company will be sold in pieces, although options are still at an early stage.
But even more, he craves the experience of transcendence: to move beyond his world and see it as a bigger place, without the strictures placed on him by the culture and religion he was raised in.
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, 33, Saudi Arabia's de facto ruler, has somewhat loosened social strictures in the absolute monarchy, but critics say he has offered little more than an iron fist in a velvet glove.
For starters, their hidden relationship speaks to cultural strictures -- she was Korean-American, he the son of Pakistani immigrants -- that created impediments to their relationship, issues that Lee addresses at some length in the diary entries.
Nevertheless, I'd argue that the novel could have stood on its own without all the romance — Wuertz has some stunning chapters that focus on the various ways different women navigate the patriarchal strictures of Korean society.
The procedures may stretch over the course of a year or more, and come with risks like strictures (blockages in the urethra causes by changes in diameter) and fistulas (unwanted openings that cause leakage), Bowers explains.
And combined with the abundant material riches of the New World, and the Calvinist repeal of Catholic strictures on usury and excessive individual money-making, you had all the basic ingredients of the spirit of American capitalism.
In the end, Mr Bannon may prove a more effective advocate for his worldview freed from the strictures of the White House—particularly under John Kelly, the new chief of staff who was hired to impose discipline.
Robin Kelly (D-Ill.), Washington, D.C. Supreme Court nominee politics The Supreme Court has become over many decades a political chamber used by both liberal and conservative justices to enshrine their heartfelt beliefs irrespective of constitutional strictures.
It is a policy that has drawn some popular support while provoking outrage and ridicule, with editorialists playing up the irony of a liberal country challenging the strictures of Islam by telling women what they cannot wear.
Dozens of hotels and resorts on Turkey's shores, featuring separate pools and beaches for men and women to meet religious strictures on modesty, are attracting families from Turkey, the Middle East and Muslim communities in the West.
In the end, for instance, Carter decided to exempt the Shah&aposs Iran from serious human-rights strictures and his hardline national security advisor, Zbigniew Brzezinski, undercut those talks with the Soviet Union on reducing arms sales.
He wasn't comfortable being a nostalgist—he needed to put his distinctly Chicagoan tracks in conversation with similarly minded music from around the world, adopting new sounds to bend the strictures of the genre into something new.
In his speech here, he cast that not as a means of relinquishing labor to the unsentimental winds of capitalism, but rather giving start-up companies relief from the strictures of national labor contracts negotiated by unions.
But that rule applies only to companies that have securities registered with the S.E.C., which means that privately held corporations could avoid the strictures of the new negligence standard by not selling securities to the general public.
But the capture of the town ends Islamic State's era of territorial rule over the so-called caliphate that it proclaimed in 2014 across Iraq and Syria and in which millions suffered under its hardline, repressive strictures.
The same secular Israelis who are nonplused when bus service or store hours are curtailed on the Sabbath — policies that directly affect their daily lives — are largely indifferent to other strictures that affect their routines much less.
Shortly after the president's remarks, Mr. Cuomo said that New York would continue to abide by that agreement's strictures on greenhouse gases, forming a coalition with other states as similar actions were adopted by cities and companies.
Economically damaged by the crisis and restrained by European Union strictures from financing efforts to jump-start their struggling national economies, ruling parties have focused on controlling the news media as a way to shore up power.
WASHINGTON — Randal Quarles, nominated by President Trump to supervise the nation's largest banks, told senators on Thursday that it was time to reconsider some of the strictures imposed on the financial industry after the 2008 financial crisis.
The first court to look at Mr Timbs's complaint found the state's seizure of his car to be disproportionate, but the Indiana Supreme Court said it isn't the state's job to impose the federal constitution's strictures upon itself.
Israelis whose Judaism is questioned by the rabbinate — or who just do not want to adhere to its strictures — have made an end-run around the institution by marrying abroad, particularly in Cyprus; the government recognizes these unions.
In his brief speech, Mr Trump wagged his finger at the courts and at "far-left-wing" activists but bowed to the judgment that the citizenship question had not been adequately justified under the strictures of administrative law.
Sarah McKune, senior legal adviser to Citizen Lab, said Israel tries to follow the strictures of the Wassenaar Arrangement, which puts controls on the international sale of nuclear and chemical weapons technology and more recently cyber intrusion tools.
It's easy to understand why these messy realities have, until recently, been hard to portray on television; the strictures of the 23-episode series, aired once a week for 30 minutes, used to require much simpler narrative structures.
To its credit the AK party has eased away from the Kemalists' uncompromising rejection of Kurdish claims, loosening official strictures on Kurdish languages, opening a dialogue with Mr Ocalan and agreeing to indirect peace talks with the PKK.
It's a time of serious change in Lady Bird's life—she's discovering her sexuality, struggling to prep for college, and bristling against the strictures of her new Catholic school—and Gerwig's film explores how she tackles it all.
The Court spends a large part of its time providing the final interpretative say on matters of federal jurisdiction, the federal rules of evidence and of civil and criminal procedure, and the strictures of the federal sentencing guidelines.
The movement was perhaps the most radically significant artistic development of Italy's fertile postwar period: Artists rebelled against the commercialism and elitist strictures of the day with readily accessible materials and constructions far outside the canon of art.
Some aides also say that for weeks Mr. Trump has been fielding complaints from allies and staff members about the strictures Mr. Kelly has placed on access to the president and his enforcement of a chain of command.
After all, most of the teams at the rink hailed from large universities like Penn State and the University of Delaware, with well-established hockey programs that receive money from their schools and are unencumbered by religious strictures.
It steps outside of the Gilead that we've seen — the serene exterior of Commanders' homes, wives decked in blue, the strictures of the Red Center — to communicate how piety is just another carefully coordinated mask in this culture.
Condemning neoliberalism becomes a way of hiding from the harsh strictures of America's polarized, paralyzed political process, in which geography and gerrymandering gives Republicans a constant congressional advantage and Fox News spins an alternative reality on the daily.
While some have called it a reckoning, there is more to come, especially in ending the pernicious practice of paying off victims to keep quiet via nondisclosures that allow perpetrators to move on to their next jobs without strictures.
Permitting a pious man like Mr Phillips to define what someone else does as religious and to refuse service to people who fail to follow his own strictures in that context, transforms religious liberty into a self-defeating principle.
Ms. Kennedy, an eight-time Oscar nominee, told fellow board members that she was outraged by the allegations, according to a person briefed on advance discussions, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to comply with academy confidentiality strictures.
Only HR2628 is much worse: You lose your primary health insurance, you cannot buy supplemental insurance (such as Medicare Advantage), and your medical care provider must be either public or non-profit, operating under the strictures of Washington bureaucrats.
These poems are clearly aware of the conventions of Hebrew poetry that preceded them — and this, I think, was and still is part of why it is exciting to see a slight loosening of some of these poetic strictures.
Kathleen Kennedy, an eight-time Oscar nominee, told fellow board members that she was outraged by the allegations, according to a person briefed on advance discussions, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to comply with academy confidentiality strictures.
He cited new evidence showing that the plaintiffs (organisations dedicated to assisting migrants) would be negatively impacted by the tightened asylum rules by having to retrain staff and dedicate extra resources to helping asylum applicants navigate the new strictures.
Years later, in graduate school at Wesleyan, Mr. Sorey studied under Mr. Braxton, a founding member of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians, whose compositions use a colorful notation system that ignores the strictures of standard staves.
Arriving in New York in the mid-1960s, Mr. Burrell recognized that a young pianist seeking admittance to the so-called "new thing" would need an original approach, given the hostility of many musicians to the strictures of chords.
The United States and the United Nations have enacted broad and punitive strictures that are already beginning to throttle Mr. Kim's war economy, forcing Pyongyang to spend down its foreign currency reserves and strategic stockpiles of food and energy.
The essential strictures of the Volcker Rule are well known: U.S. banking entities and foreign banking entities with a U.S. presence are prohibited from engaging in proprietary trading or investing in (or "sponsoring") hedge funds and private equity funds.
We are not free to murder or steal — we are free from the strictures of time, workplace stress, of being told what to do, where to go, how to be; we can travel as we may, how we may.
To that extent there's a touch of "The Last Emperor," initially, in the queen's plight, showered as she is in privilege while frequently being denied what she wants by the strictures placed upon her by those who profess to know better.
Hutch, a London- and Brighton-based studio, started out in 2011 after the founders became dissatisfied with the creative strictures of big games publisher life, and decided to set up their own — a familiar story in the games development space.
And as more platforms for original scripted TV programming crop up, with fewer strictures over what can or cannot be shown or talked about, shows with sex — real sex, with all its attendant dilemmas and awkwardness — are given room to thrive.
Add to that mix a father with a taste for Rolex watches, and a mother who turned her back on life's little luxuries in keeping with the strictures of her faith, and you have the makings of a seriously conflicted youth.
The lure of Europe as an escape (or at least vacation) from the strictures of Anglo-American moralism goes back at least as far as Henry James, reaching its high-water mark with Hemingway and Fitzgerald, and in Britain with Isherwood.
Chloe loves Henry, but years of rules that only apply to her and not to other people have made her resentful and rebellious, and well before the first act ends, she's in full meltdown mode against her father and his strictures.
By the summer of 21978, a half-century ago this year, nearly 21980,21980 hippies and counterculture kids had gathered in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood to drop acid, indulge in free love, and escape the confining strictures of their middle-class upbringings.
Jabhat al-Nusra, by contrast, seeks to win the respect of brutalised Sunnis by fighting Mr Assad; sharia strictures have, for the most part, been light; the caliphate is a long-term objective, to be established when conditions are ripe.
It has evaded some of the strictures suffered by other forums because it is neither a news site nor a means of exchanging salacious videos (a new preoccupation for regulators, who recently called for 24-hour monitoring of live-streaming sites).
Consistent themes in Mr. Salvini's political discourse are his total disregard for the European Commission's strictures about the need for budget discipline and his strong advocacy of a major tax cut in the form of the introduction of a flat tax.
But even in rare cases where perpetrators are convicted and punished severely, many victims report that their experience was retraumatizing and disempowering: Their story was confined to the rigid strictures of a prosecutor's narrative and raked over on cross-examination.
The same things that drove him as a performer — faith in unfettered communication, an irreverent approach to the strictures of language, the desire to wrap all of American culture in his embrace — course through his writings, collages and home recordings.
A New Yorker magazine correspondent in Moscow, Yaffa paints a deep and revealing portrait of life inside Vladimir Putin's Russia by profiling prominent figures who have learned to navigate the regime's increasingly strict and often arbitrary cultural and political strictures.
Despite the wide variety of these influences, they like to think of themselves as "punk," and the film tries to evoke their desire to be as revolutionary as their Western peers while living under strictures that those peers couldn't really imagine.
It makes sense that this show felt more aggressively male than usual; Kanye, at this point in time, represents a kind of alternative masculinity that seems as if it's free of the (supposed) strictures that are placed on masculinity today.
At the same time, as Schmitz notes, what both Trump and Francis promise — deliverance "from inconvenient and unresponsive institutions, with all their strictures and corruptions" — downplays the value of rules, customs, and traditions in protecting people from the rule of novelty and whim.
He just realized that he wanted nothing to do with our Jesuit school's draconian rules about, well, just about everything, but strictures of dorm life certainly didn't jive with his lifestyle of rampant indoor smoking and alcohol-fueled destruction of communal property.
Slick, often funny, online videos produced by young Saudis score millions of hits on YouTube and the 2012 movie Wadjda - the work of a female Saudi director about a young girl navigating religious strictures - won awards at a number of international film festivals.
The narrative itself asks the audience to think about how people engage with true stories, particularly those told by and about women, as Grace is perpetually hemmed in by the social strictures of her time and the preconceptions of the men around her.
Such allusions —along with those to his childhood memories of the comestibles unloaded on the docks of his native Piraeus — point to the myriad ways in which Kounellis's work has long eschewed the ascetic strictures attendant upon the 1960s exploration of objecthood.
And people ... they say they were, but the results seem to be very obvious that they didn't even ... in the design of it they never thought of it, they never thought of it one minute, because they had no strictures on them.
It was a time of tossing off strictures: artists rebelled against the constraints of style and specialization, knocking out music, movies, and manifestos with abandon, commandeering Xerox machines to produce editions of low-cost prints alongside fliers and posters as advertisements for themselves.
Her use of different styles – from expressionist to classical – and different colors (blue, green, gray, yellow and pink, to name just a few) to distinguish her individuals suggests that stylistic unity is an illusion, that the world never conformed to such repressive strictures.
But a close look at his résumé, and conversations with people familiar with his background, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of confidentiality strictures, suggest that Mr. Harder's emergence as a power player happened as most things do in Hollywood.
Older N.B.A. players who leveraged their reputations to cheat on defense and get to the free-throw line on offense will have to cede their spots to younger, less creative players who can still perform inside the strictures of the official rule book.
Adding to the wonder of the novel's prose was the fact that it had been written in English, a choice made, as Jin told interviewers, to free himself of the warping effects that Maoist structures and strictures had placed on his native tongue.
Some of its strictures begin to phase out in less than a decade, during which time Tehran can expand its power in the Middle East, just as the United States' tools for trying to keep it in check — in particular, sanctions — are limited.
Sanctions with a genuine bite should be implemented — the dysfunctional DPRK economy is uniquely susceptible to these, and amazing as this may sound, the current sanctions strictures on North Korea have long been weaker than, say, those enforced until recently on Iran.
Because that argument, and the differences between the two proclamations, may carry the day for this president — and will have a far-reaching impact on his successors, who will be required to work within the strictures of the Supreme Court's ultimate decision.
In Europe, the demise of the old left has been cemented by the strictures of E.U. membership, which sets in stone practices that were once anathema to socialists: free trade, limits on national spending and monetary policies that subordinate employment to price stability.
"Not that CBS broadcast television isn't high-quality and the best stuff on TV, but there are certain aesthetics that the premium services and Showtimes of the world can do because they're behind the paywall and don't have the strictures of broadcast," DeBevoise says.
The group held its first full bat mitzvah, a coming-of-age ceremony for girls, at the wall in 2014 and got around the strictures against women reading from the Torah there by sneaking in a miniature scroll that was read with a magnifying glass.
The crackdown, led by the hard-line-dominated judiciary and security forces, runs counter to the policies of President Hassan Rouhani, who was elected on a platform of greater personal freedoms and has called in several recent speeches for a loosening of Iran's social strictures.
Multiple people involved with the film, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of confidentiality strictures, said that Sony secured the "Ellen" booking two months ago, and that the studio was thrilled with the chance to promote "Ghostbusters" in such a positive, prominent setting.
Fittingly, that's the anniversary the house of Christian Dior is celebrating come next year — the anniversary of the founder's "New Look," the contemporary term for Dior's wasp-waisted, full-skirted silhouette that, in its outright defiance of wartime strictures, transformed the way the world looked.
The virus will almost certainly re-emerge as individual states and cities start to lift the strictures of social distancing and shelter-in-place — but, ideally, that re-emergence will look more like a string of smaller brush fires than one raging forest fire.
Another school with Orthodox roots, Touro College, has been running programs in New York aimed at the ultra-Orthodox, for example scheduling classes that allow men and women to attend on separate days so as not to violate strictures against the mixing of the sexes.
She and her sister Tennessee Claflin had opened the first woman-run brokerage firm on Wall Street and ran a newspaper, Woodhull & Claflin's Weekly, dedicated to women's suffrage, socialism and "free love," a term she popularized to describe sex outside the strictures of marriage.
But not all of their comments made it into the final program aired on MSNBC last night — we got a lot of substance in, but it's still TV and has time strictures — so we will post them all here on Recode for you to see.
While Stella, once he broke from the mold of Greenbergian flatness, could equate presence only with volume and visual weight, Bonnefoi's response to the same strictures was an emphasis on thinness and on the absence of physical weight; an excess of both material and metaphorical lightness.
Despite much ink spilled, the non-cultural explanations for chronic under-development — and here it's everything from colonialism, the all-purpose favorite, to geography to lack of salt — are routinely trotted out despite their evident implausibility and their obvious foundation in PC strictures rather than facts.
There are those grateful for the strictures placed on gun ownership, and there are those fighting for their right to expand their presence in the country -- to the point of setting up the German Rifle Association, largely based on the National Rifle Association in the United States.
Among those who came were a young man called Guled, who had been kidnapped and escaped from al Shabaab; Nisho, born as his parents were fleeing Somalia in 1991; and clever, strong-willed Muna, to whom schooling gave the confidence to defy the strictures of her clan.
The EU's instruction to curb this privilege, among other things by banning people from possessing semi-automatic weapons, has enraged Swiss on the prickly right, even though their federal parliament has diluted the EU's edict, for instance by exempting members of shooting clubs from such strictures.
These were not one-off instances, either, as the Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World notes: Whatever the legal strictures on sexual activity, the positive expression of male homoerotic sentiment in literature was accepted, and assiduously cultivated, from the late eighth century until modern times.
Modern Orthodox Judaism — a loosely defined sect that adheres to the strictures of Jewish Scripture, while engaging with the broader world, intellectually and economically — has always been something of a paradox: It embraces modernity and, at the same time, lives by the dictums of an ancient system.
Among those legions, many had already started to adopt the musician's striking visual aesthetic: performatively dead eyes (bored, at best), hair dyed in shades of electric blue and pale purple, an all-baggy anti-silhouette — a collective middle finger to the strictures of teen-pop sex appeal.
Or whether, like so many designers before him, including Ann Demeulemeester, Helmut Lang and Jil Sander, he will eventually chafe against the strictures of a boss (even if he is still chief creative officer and chairman of the board) and depart the brand that bears his name.
Placards reading "Girls Say Yes to Boys Who Say No" — no to the draft, that is — lent credence to the fears of conservatives who were pro-war and distraught over loosening strictures on premarital sex and believed that the rising of the women meant societal collapse.
Beautifully produced, this collaboration with the BBC (where the program has already aired) features Hayley Atwell as Margaret Schlegel, who along with her more impetuous sister Helen (Philippa Coulthard) are living relatively liberated lives within the strictures of Edwardian London along with their aunt (Tracey Ullman).
"The Good Fight" is being made for CBS's subscription streaming platform, CBS All Access, which means the show's creators, Robert and Michelle King, are liberated from the strictures of a broadcast network whose audiences tend to skew older and more conservative than those of its competitors.
But what if something outside politics changed the way in which Congress -- especially Republicans in Congress, who have generally voted in lockstep with the National Rifle Association to oppose any further strictures on guns -- thinks about what can be done in terms of common-sense gun laws?
Set in the time just before Perestroika, Leto — which means "Summer" — is a fond tribute to the underground scene in Leningrad, and to the young people in it, who were immersed in music coming from the West but stuck living in the strictures of Soviet Russia.
Just as businesses have sought to escape the old corporate strictures by encouraging flexible and off-site work and by flattening hierarchies (sometimes even eliminating managers), protesters have tried to move past the groaning actions of the past by coördinating instantly across distance and embracing leaderless or "horizontal" movements.
I had graduated a couple of years earlier from Cedarville University, one of the most conservative Christian colleges in the country, and Cedarville itself wasn't much of a departure for me: It was simply a progression from the strictures of the religious subculture I'd already been raised in.
This show deliberately sets itself up as occurring 25 years after the end of the older series, and that it's airing 25 years after isn't just a neat trick: It's drawing on our nostalgia while also consciously trying to subvert any strictures we might want to place on it.
Instead of playing out familiar plotlines, which would otherwise escort us all the way to the tomb, we can take over the screenplays of our lives, and we can begin to spin the most quixotic yarns, set in a wilderness untamed by moralism, careerism and the strictures of conformism.
As an auditor at the Food, Drug and Cosmetics Assessment Agency (LPPOM), an organisation in the leafy city of Bogor, Ms Widiahtuti reviews the applications of companies hoping their products will be deemed halal, meaning that their consumption or use does not break any of the strictures of Islam.
In 1979, they issued 20 Jazz Funk Greats their third and final proper album for another two decades (unreleased material was released throughout the 80s); recorded entirely in a studio for the first time, it also found TG engaging with the strictures of music and genre(s), with fascinating results.
The end of the Cold War, which seemed to promise an end to the black-and-white strictures of East versus West in global affairs, did not deliver nuance or inject complexity into the worldview of millions who, for various reasons, still see even mildly progressive discourse as a threat.
The move was described by people briefed on the situation, who requested anonymity because of confidentiality strictures, as an effort to guarantee future revenue as the historically cash-rich academy confronts the unaccustomed demands of its planned museum and $350 million in new borrowing that will be used to support it.
Robert Olmstead's seventh novel is set in the reddening dusk of 1870s Indian Territory, where lives were often unmoored by any strictures of civilization, but the "Savage Country" of its title might equally refer to the human heart at large, with its alternating impulses of ambition and cruelty, humanity and inhumanity.
The house special (1,690 forints) pairs fresh noodles with a savory, pork-based broth adorned with tender slices of braised pork belly, boiled egg, sprouts, chives, carrot matchsticks and wood-ear mushrooms, while those following the neighborhood's more traditional dietary strictures might prefer the pork-free, miso-based version (1,690 forints).
It usually takes a village, real, virtual or proverbial, to make an Islamist terrorist — one composed of hate-spewing imams, TV programs saturated with anti-Semitic and anti-Western conspiracy theories, neighborhood vigilantes enforcing fundamentalist religious strictures, and political leaders excusing, reflecting or disseminating many of the same beliefs and attitudes.
As we stood in the gardens surrounding the tower, he told me how Poland's Modernist structures had, in fact, first appeared as a form of change within the Communist system, a vernacular of liberation for the country's architects, who were finally permitted to move beyond the strictures of Stalin's Socialist Realism.
Yet local pay caps meant Hamers was one of the lowest-paid among major European bank CEOs, and in moving to Switzerland he is likely to escape such salary strictures, given the generous 13.8 million Swiss francs ($14 million) compensation doled out to UBS's outgoing Sergio Ermotti, excluding benefits, in 2018.
Since the mid 1990s when Serena and Venus made their debuts as professional tennis players, they have changed the way the game is played by embracing and pushing the limits of their physical prowess and mental acumen, uninhibited by the artificial limits that strictures of gender had previously imposed on women.
Zimbabwe offers important lessons on how a post-independence black-majority government can manage, or mismanage, the gap between the strictures of liberal constitutions that entrench the property rights of the white minority and the demands of the black majority to right historical injustices and structural inequalities that disproportionately affect them.
The Terror turns this basic idea into an opportunity for a grim but rewarding story about men confronting death, men confronting the strictures of a masculine code that can't protect them from the unknown, and men confronting the terrible randomness of nature, here represented as a massive demon/god/thing called the Tuunbaq.
It is not the result of the failure of individuals to adopt the moralizing strictures of "green" consciousness, and it is a sign of just how far we have to go that some still believe reusable shopping bags and composting (perfectly fine in their own right) are ways out of this mess.
But unlike any other first lady, instead of seeing it as part of a uniform to which she had to conform, with the attendant rules and strictures that implies, she saw it as a way to frame her own independence and points of difference, add to her portfolio and amplify her husband's agenda.
" Tug-of-war over lifestyles The strictures placed on students are not just a matter of personal annoyances, says Iranian economy and education specialist Nader Habibi, of Brandeis University in the U.S. "The government imposes an Islamic lifestyle," he says, but for many urban families, "their vision of a good lifestyle is more liberal.
Two information officers supplied a stream of printed and oral releases throughout the procedure, including a detailed schedule of examinations and records processing, as well as instant confirmation of Clay's acceptable blood test and the fact that he had obeyed Muslim dietary strictures by passing up the ham sandwich included in the inductees' box lunches.
This should be something everyone can relate to, given the current craziness around dress codes in general, be it the complete nonsense of events that request "creative dress" or "dress to impress" or the difficulty of corporate strictures on dressing "appropriately" in an office setting, a word so vague that it is practically meaningless.
In the context of the papacy, in his style as a ruler of the church, Francis is flagrantly Trumpian: a shatterer of norms, a disregarder of traditions, an insult-heavy rhetorician, a pontiff impatient with the strictures of church law and inclined to govern by decree when existing rules and structures resist his will.
"There could have been some ways early on in his presidency to use his unique standing of a somewhat-independent who did not have the normal party strictures, and to date he has not been able to capitalize on that," said Thomas F. McLarty III, who was Bill Clinton's first White House chief of staff.
According to The Times at least 22 million people in China — over 211 percent of its population — are facing government restrictions about how often they can leave their homes, and more than 760 million people in China live in neighborhoods and villages that have imposed strictures of some sort on residents' comings and goings.
But among the Trump supporters themselves, within the safety of the self-defined "us," there was palpable loosening of the strictures that have traditionally attended sexuality and gender in Republican politics, a genuine-seeming acceptance of difference in the midst of a political movement that had been, from the beginning, a hurricane of polarized identity.
It is pointless to insist on a uniform ethic of client service when bankers sometimes occupy roles as trusted advisers, but at other times act as middlemen who operate between buyers and sellers of products — especially when bankers, like anyone else, are governed by the strictures against fraud and in favor of good faith.
The second date was, well, Monday, when the Trump White House and key Democratic and Republican leaders in Congress agreed to a two-year budget deal that further unraveled the spending strictures put in place by tea party Republicans in 2011 and suspended the debt ceiling through July 2021 -- and, in practical terms, well into 2022.
And a final suggestion for those, like me, who look for ways to minimize the impact from unnecessarily rigid regulatory strictures: When the FCC acts on the pending petitions asking for reconsideration of the federal designation process, it should also reconsider whether the new minimum service standards it adopted for both voice and broadband Lifeline providers make sense.
Westworld For visitors to the park, the chief allure of Westworld is freedom: freedom from the strictures of legality and social norms; freedom to indulge in whatever violent and sexual fantasies they can imagine; freedom of the kind settlers might have experienced in the wide-open terrain of the Old West, before civilization came along and posted the guardrails.
HISTORICALLY, CONSERVATIVE dressing is most frequently associated with religious adherence, which makes the most recent, trendier iteration of the phenomenon especially surprising — considering the kind of woman who is newly sheathing herself in long, baggy silhouettes is often the type of liberal nonbeliever who'd be the first to eschew any traditional strictures on her choices, sartorial or otherwise.
There was a brief period roughly between 2011 and 2014, after cigarettes were banned in the city's public parks and plazas and before the strictures around pot smoking began to loosen, when you could amble around the city and pretty much only encounter the smell of smoke when and if you had the misfortune of walking past a fire.
In the United States, the Chinese have figured out that it is easy to sidestep the strictures of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, which limits foreign investment in nationally sensitive industries, simply by investing in start-ups and other ventures that have access or insight into critical technologies or by working in university research labs to the same end.
Ms. Zernowitski — who in keeping with modesty strictures wears a wig, but one so subtle it is impossible to notice — sees herself as embodying the generational yearnings of ultra-Orthodox voters who, unlike forebears who saw the land of Israel as holy but were uncertain about the state, want to feel more fully a part of the country in which they are citizens.
"We haven't seen this in ten years, since the CPE," said one high school student, referring to the 2006 student protests over the proposed First Employment Contract (CPE), which would have relaxed some legal strictures for people hired for the first time, to try and reduce France's unemployment rate, which stands at a relatively high 10 percent according to national statistics institute INSEE.
WASHINGTON — As the United Nations General Assembly converges in New York on Tuesday, Secretary General Ban Ki-moon is using the gathering of world leaders to rush the 22 Paris climate change accord into legal force this year, hoping to bind all countries to its strictures for at least the next four years — regardless of the outcome of the presidential election in the United States.
For Catholic believers, Father Monroe's struggle may have powerful resonance, but most in the audience are likely to find the whole issue faintly academic, if not banal; the Catholic Church's strictures on the priesthood (no women, no marriage), homosexuality, abortion and other matters — which even many Catholics consider ludicrously out of step with today's world — have been fodder for debate in the popular media for years.
By confronting it so publicly, Whelan has confronted the limited strictures that govern the very perception of contemporary ballet: that it is necessarily ageist in its demands of the human body, that it excuses and glorifies a culture of dancing through pain, and that it relies on women's bodies to be the tools of its expression, forcing its rigid ideas of beauty even at the expense of safety and comfort.
Just as it is unthinkable that the same strictures would apply to a black man drinking a tallboy on a sidewalk in East New York and a private equity investor having a glass of pinot noir on his stoop on East 93rd Street, it is inconceivable that a woman in Chelsea would be stopped by the police on her way to Barry's Bootcamp in cropped leggings and a sports bra.
Rendering of Escobedo Soliz Studio's winning proposal for MoMA PS1 's Young Architects Program Image by Escobedo Soliz, 2016 Embodying a characteristically Millennial attitude, their practice is concerned primarily with navigating the quotidian constraints of practice and bending those strictures towards producing innovative and thoughtfully understated solutions, relying on depressions in walls to dictate the geometries of their rope canopy at PS1, or by recycling building materials from past constructions in other projects.
Rather than billboard overt politics at the Oscars — in the manner of Jane Fonda, who once wore black to the ceremony to protest the Vietnam War, or Katharine Hepburn, who once showed up looking as though she'd happened by after cleaning out her garage, or Cher, who once dressed in a feathered headpiece, a Vegas version of Native American regalia, to flout a newly issued set of Academy strictures regarding appropriate dress — the actresses this year largely attired themselves in curve hugging dresses and daring décolletage.
In that fine print, it turns out that Andrew's breakdown — his visions, the attendant writer's block and uncontrollable urges, as well as a protracted, bizarre battle he wages with a "cut of Black Angus beef tenderloin, dry aged for 21 days and weighing seven and a half pounds, at $39.99 a pound" — reflects the strictures that governed the ancient High Priest's conduct leading up to the moment, during Yom Kippur, when he would speak the name of God and attain atonement for all the world's Jews.
Thereafter, Eva Illouz uses Israel as her focus to discuss internal radicalization; Ivan Krastev references a novel by José Saramago to contextualize how so many nations have gone from disconnected to connected, then to barricaded, as citizens of other nations flow over their borders; essays by Bruno Latour, Paul Mason and Robert Misik focus primarily on recent political developments in Europe to address the increasingly defunct strictures and structures put in place by unscrupulous neoliberal capitalists, while Pankaj Mishra does much the same from a more broadly global perspective.
" Many of his insights derive from a nearly lifelong engagement with certain books — such as with the notebooks of Emil Cioran and Simone Weil, who with her uncompromising spiritual strictures "still tortures us" — but we also witness his excitement, as it were, in making discoveries, as when he first encounters the Austrian writer Walter Kappacher (unavailable, alas, in English translation) or writes at greater length about the letters of D. H. Lawrence, which testify to a "yearning for another life, for a pure intense existence, although we're more cautious than he, since we've now seen— even experienced — so many false faiths and prophecies.

No results under this filter, show 564 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.