Sentences with phrase «often confined»

Although psychotherapy today is primarily concerned with feelings, it is often confined to an intellectual - cognitive level.
Kim's increasingly distilled paintings were often confined in their formal vocabulary to the line and the dot, and to meditative blues — in Korean art, the color associated with wood, the moon, femininity, receptiveness, and the east.
The casual, anthropomorphic metaphors of city residents are often confined to the internal organs of an imagined body: one either travels to the heart of a metropolis for its centre, or down, via an intestinal subway system, into its bowels.
In an abusive situation, the dog is often confined to a cage or small area, or kept on a chain so there's no option to run away.
Breeding dogs in puppy mills have no real quality of life, and are often confined to small wire cages for most of their lives with little or no socialization, exercise or veterinary care.
He goes on to mention that Bac - Out is often confined strictly to the natural sections of household cleaners.
Breeding stock is often confined to a small cage and the bitch kept pregnant, litter after litter.
In our not - so - distant past, canines were often confined to solitude in a doghouse or yard, but today's hounds do more traveling with their owners than before.
Puppy mills are mass - production facilities where the breeding dogs are often confined to small wire cages for life and deprived of the basics of humane care, solely to produce puppies for the pet trade.
Existing mechanisms of asset management and available ways of investing funds are often confined to a narrow circle of customers: these are either professional investors or people with a large fortune, serviced by professional financial advisers.
January 9, 2018 • In life and in art, women are often confined to interior spaces.
Phantom Thread is a more static film than the likes of Inherent Vice or The Master, so often confined to indoor settings.
As a child, Scorsese suffered from asthma and was often confined inside the house while his friends played outside.
But Part 2 examines Robinson's later, less celebrated years, completing a portrait of an eventful life that, in the popular mind, is often confined to the ball field.
He is one of the toughest and most violent British criminals who's been serving time since 1974, often confined to isolation.
Often confined to one or two chapters in older histories, the internal reform of the Catholic Church after 1550 is allocated six chapters here, amounting to 150 pages against the 230 devoted to the rise of the many forms of Protestantism.
When we think of winter outfits, we often confine them to pants and coats; thinking dresses are for summer.
While the internet offers a broad sphere for finding a match, traditional way significantly narrows your choices by limiting you geographically and often confining you to your existing social circles.
Practitioners of what's now called «venture» or «strategic philanthropy» have been carried away by the conceit that they know best what needs to happen, and they often confine their support to those who take direction from them.
They wrestle with one another or embrace each other in a hostile, unsettling and often confining world.

Not exact matches

Until recently, measuring social media around a current or planned event, a brand, an advertising campaign or a topic was confined to measuring how often the events, brands, campaigns, topics and associated keywords were mentioned in mainstream media and on the web.
I am often asked whether we can not get used to given working hours merely through discipline and by confining our sleep habits to certain times.
That is why, in the twentieth century, powerful opiates and opioids (an opioid is a synthetic drug that mimics opium) were largely taboo — confined to patients with serious cancers, and often to end - of - life care.
After an emotional encounter with a woman confined to a nursing home, Dupin decided to develop a novel, if not controversial, alternative to sending our loved ones to living facilities that are often over-crowded and under - staffed: the MEDCottage — a small, self - contained living space that can be placed in the backyard.
Even people in our churches are often more inclined to form opinions on international matters on the basis of national identity rather than Christian identity, which can never be confined to the boundaries of a nation - state.
Organized religions are often meaningless because they try to confine this something larger and greater in terms that only mean something in our simpler universe.
This was not narrowly confined to the eternal destiny of the individual in the way the hope of personal immortality has so often been.
Thirdly, the mythological world was divided into two parts, the unseen world of the gods, often associated with the sky above, and the visible tangible world to which men were confined.
She often visited a man confined to a lunatic asylum.
When it does take its social responsibility seriously it all too often thinks of society as a physical and not a spiritual form of human existence and it tends, therefore, to confine its care of society to interest in the prosperity and peace of men in their communities.
Politicians often solemnly admonish the Church and its preachers and clergy to confine themselves to their task and leave politics and social life to the politicians, particularly the government.
Thereby human rights terminology has often been used to justify decisions to provide aid or to terminate it; while human rights criteria - to the extent that there is such a thing in the aid policy of any donor - have been confined to the search for those human rights violations which could justify cutting off aid.
Although her services were not confined to women, it is obvious that she could often be especially helpful to them and especially useful to the administrators of the church in dealing with them.
In some cases more costly due to confined area restrictions which often require gas detection devices and operator safety harnesses to be used
Cayenne pepper, made from the ripe pods of the Capsicum annuum, or Guinea pepper, enters largely (often unsuspected) into the soups, hashes, stews, meat - pies, and gravies that appear on English dinner - tables; but its medicinal uses, in this country, are nearly confined to furnishing a gargle, which is found to be very efficacious in strengthening and restoring the voice when weakened or lost by a relaxed sore throat.
This doesn't mean that they are confined to one or the other, it just means that they do one better and more often than the other.
For meat, poultry, eggs and dairy products to be labeled organic, they must come from animals that are given organically grown feed, no growth hormones or antibiotics, and are not confined 100 percent of the time, as they often are on conventional farms, says Steven Hoffman of the Organic Center, a non-profit group that furthers research on organic food.
Usually confined to the first trimester, it is often intensified for moms of multiples.
Often I am confined to my bed nursing both at the same time for hours just so they can get a nap in!
This Joovy Caboose Ultralight stroller is so helpful for keeping my kids with me while shopping, when it's often essential to confine them to the stroller.
«9According to one researcher, «Milk alone was believed sufficient until the baby showed signs of failure, and often the young child's diet was confined to little more than milk until he was two years of age.
Despite technological advances and slowly evolving parenting styles that accommodate them, modern women are often as confined in their homes with their young children as the servants, wet nurses or nannies of the last century were.
What is conspicuous about Labour leadership contests in the new era is that, unlike those confined to the PLP only — let alone Tory elections — they have more often than not been foregone conclusions.
The accused were often assigned lawyers and confined to jail during trials.
While previous studies have surveyed the genomic characteristics of tumors confined to the prostate gland, the new study is the first to focus on metastatic hormone resistant prostate cancers, which can be difficult to treat because they often develop resistance to standard treatments.
When people talk about industrial farming, they usually refer to the often deplorable conditions in which livestock is raised these days, usually confined in close quarters, often indoors.
Although patients are still disabled, confined to bed and on a feeding tube, some sort of communication, albeit erratic and often inconsistent, occurs.
Discoveries and advancements in these diverse arenas have often remained confined within each respective field, a situation that benefits neither the researchers nor the broader public.
Every so often, farming processes included adding harmful toxins in herbicides and pesticides, not mentioning the feeding of animals in confined conditions which has drastically changed food production from the small local and sustainable farm model that the informed general population would want.
The symptoms of oestrogen dominance are extremely varied, and this can often result in misdiagnosis, they include, but are not confined to:
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