Example sentences of "be restricted to " in BNC.
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1 | The discussion may be restricted to impeccably intellectual topics , but the play of market forces is going on all the time just below the surface . |
2 | Bill Morris , deputy general secretary of the TGWU and the most influential black trade unionist , believes society membership should be restricted to representatives of ethnic minorities . |
3 | Israel was also said to be determined that the agenda for a meeting with Palestinians be restricted to agreeing details of the conduct of elections in the West Bank and Gaza Strip . |
4 | Allen and McNab are fit again , but will be restricted to the bench by City , who will not change the team that has scored 12 in winning their last three games . |
5 | As the volume of private building increases over the two or three years following the proposed changes of policy , local authority housing must as soon as possible be restricted to these objects . |
6 | When it is discovered that the combination of certain proportions of charcoal , sulphur and saltpetre produces disagreeable results , then there is no reason why the benefits of gunpowder should be restricted to China . |
7 | In its recommendations , the IEHO said that any pool should be fully supervised by trained staff unless it fills three criteria ; the pool is used infrequently ; a relevant member of staff is always aware when the pool is in use ; and that use be restricted to adults of known swimming ability . |
8 | The Danish Prime Minister , Mr Poul Schluter , insisted that the future union could not be restricted to purely monetary issues but would have to involve an increasing convergence of economic policies and objectives for growth , inflation , and employment . |
9 | Thus a company directly created by special Act of Parliament will be restricted to acts necessary or reasonably incident to the objects specified in the Act . |
10 | You will , of course , continue to be restricted to the neighbourhood of Battalion HQ — no straying . |
11 | Gross distortion is present and , unless a fish eye view is required , the three point perspective should be restricted to a 30° cone . |
12 | At this stage , services are liable to be restricted to those assumed to be at special risk' or whose circumstances warrant special priority ( p. 45 ) . |
13 | Yet on any interpretation , the ‘ peoples of Europe ’ can never be restricted to the peoples of the European Community , and therefore the ‘ ever closer union ’ has nothing to do with the EC itself . |
14 | In the sluggishly expanding industrial labour market women have lost ground relative to men , and an important proportion of the women who must seek work because of inadequate earnings of the husband or because the family lacks a male breadwinner continue to be restricted to domestic service , street vending , and other marginal low-income occupations . |
15 | This is an important concept , because the 1988 Act states that total admissions in any school year must not be restricted to a number below the school 's standard number . |
16 | The Ukrainian Bolsheviks tended to be restricted to the eastern Ukraine ; they were therefore limited in their capacity to combat the Rada 's position by , for example , raising revolutionary peasant demands . |
17 | Bukharin advanced the case that the right of self-determination be restricted to the ‘ toiling masses ’ , buttressing his argument with quotations from Lenin 's writings that affirmed that the Party 's task was to secure the ‘ self-determination of the working class ’ rather than that of peoples . |
18 | Next , there is no reason to suppose that the loss of effectiveness suffered by a cue as a result of non-reinforced pre-exposure will be restricted to the case in which that cue is subsequently required to function as a CS ; no doubt the development of an occasion-setting function will also be retarded by exposure to the cue in question . |
19 | These chemicals are , by general definition , detergents although the term has now come to be restricted to a group of synthetic chemicals which have very specific effects the result of which is that dirt is taken into suspension in a stable form that allows it to be rinsed away . |
20 | Contrary to the general principles of distribution certain products may have to be restricted to named users who have special training . |
21 | This skin condition , caused by a large ‘ pox ’ virus , has been thought over the years to be restricted to children living in crowded , closed communities and adults who attend Turkish baths or indulge in all-in wrestling . |
22 | Her role may be restricted to advising the carers on how to treat the patient , and she may only visit the family once . |
23 | Indeed , for a long while the possession of a domestic clock or a watch tended to be restricted to the wealthy and was looked upon more as a sign of affluence than as a social necessity . |
24 | Tomorrow ( Good Friday ) the Hants Grand National motocross will take place on the Matchams Park circuit , near Ringwood , but , for the first time , it will be restricted to pre-1965 built machines and there will also be races for more modern twin shock-absorber machines . |
25 | On occasion , the literature survey may be restricted to one chapter of a volume — see , for instance , the annual Shakespeare survey . |
26 | This principle might not be restricted to cases of misconduct or lack of capability . |
27 | These systems may have to be restricted to passive use based on the extraction of information in well-defined forms . |
28 | Culyer and Brazier ( 1988 ) described the Enthoven model but argued that ‘ since it is usually supposed that the competition for contracts would not be restricted to NHS institutions we prefer the term ‘ provider markets ’ to the more usual ‘ internal markets ’ ’ . |
29 | Should they necessarily be restricted to electoral variations , or even to activity around state institutions such as local government ? |
30 | Co-operation and co-ordination should not therefore be restricted to the library sector — it should reach out . |