Sentences with phrase «such confined»

For example, the wall - hung vanity unit, with its extra storage, is a real bonus in such a confined space.
Because I worked such a confined area (I had enough business to refer out business just over into the other end of town), I never spent more than $ 800 - $ 900.
This is something a DJI Mavic could theoretically do, but in my experience, such a confined space tends to trigger its sensors and stop it in its tracks.
I am truly sorry that I was not up to your educational level when trying to express myself in such a confined space as webblog.
Dog owners who enclose their dogs inside such confined spaces everyday are cruel to their pets.
Handicapped by an epic turning circle of 45.3 feet and a width of 6.6 feet with the mirrors folded, this ship needs the help of a certified captain to dock in such a confined space.
From the moment these kids enter the house to the closing credits, Alvarez builds a palpable tension, doing a masterful job working in such a confined space.
The claustrophobia of being at war in such confined spaces is amplified by the danger of imminent discovery by Germans tunnelling in the opposite direction, or from collapse and suffocation under piles of dirt and rubble.
Hitchcock and Swerling seem to know they can only last in such a confined space for so long.
Not only does the set shine a light on Tobman's work, but demonstrates what an incredible achievement Abrahamson and cinematographer Danny Cohen accomplished in such a confined space.
Because it's such a confined space, directors like Smith have to focus on the acting.
«Given that Nile crocodiles are highly territorial,» Perry wonders, «how do they manage to [get along with each other] in such a confined area?»
In such a confined operational context, international humanitarian strategy will have to develop an innovative combination of direct and indirect support to civilians.
Believe me when I tell you getting off in such a confined space is not fun!!!
They must be given some kind of outside access, but in such confined spaces only few birds are ever able to actually make it outside.
«Most change has taken place so rapidly and in such confined geographic areas that it is simply not documented by our imperfect fossil record,» according to Steven Stanley («Darwin Done Over,» the Sciences, October 1981).
Chickens are raised in such confined quarters that they can not spread their wings.
Yes, [it] sounds like high - concept nonsense, but the movie transcends such confining boundaries, probably because of Burshtein's good - humored affection for the characters who populate her story.

Not exact matches

While business uses for such devices have largely been confined thus far to presentations, Web surfing or graphic design functions, things are expected to soon change.
And proponents say they're already hitting such speed bumps, including municipalities that have confined marijuana companies to tiny industrial districts on the edge of town, or have implemented large buffers around schools and day cares that, drawn out on a map, cover nearly all of their territory.
Technology stocks involved in a bubble may be confined to a particular industry (such as internet software or fuel cells), or cover the entire technology sector as a whole, depending on the strength and depth of investor demand.
Thus, foreign - origin service providers that are based in India will also be eligible for these incentives, unlike in the past, when such incentives were confined only to «Indian» service providers.
Reid says such workarounds are far more common today than even just a few years ago, during the Great Recession, because the economic pain is confined to a single region and bank balance sheets are generally in good shape.
Avoid talking on your phone in confined spaces such as buses, subways or planes.
Smith makes it appear that such extremism was not confined to the religious.
Such morphogenetic fields, however, are not confined to biological reality.
VIII) does not confine itself to the view (shared with Bultmann) that Jesus made no claims to messianic titles, but goes on to explain the absence of any such special topic in Jesus» teaching by the view that «the «messianic» aspect of his being is enclosed in his word and act, and in the unmediatedness of his historical appearance» (178).
Such differences were denied by the participants in these parishes who, if they countenanced distinctions at all, would confine them to matters of practice (worship patterns, frequency of Scripture reading, baptism) and not faith.
And yet, in the incarnation God has affirmed the world and history in such a way that it is impossible to confine our apprehension of Him to a mythological or metaphysical elaboration of the event of incarnation.
We confine ourselves to the starting point for an understanding of the ecclesiality of theology such as has just been mentioned.
But if we dispense with God - talk altogether, we may find that we have not achieved the freedom of maturity at all, but rather lost it by confining our discourse to such limits as no longer allow room for the human spirit to breathe and move.
To risk a generalization even more reckless than those I have already made: from the time of the pre-Socratics, all the great speculative and moral systems of the pagan world were, in varying degrees, confined to this totality, to either its innermost mechanisms or outermost boundaries; rarely did any of them catch even a glimpse of what might lie beyond such a world; and none could conceive of reality except as a kind of strife between order and disorder, within which a sacrificial economy held all forces in tension.
Miracles... or those things which are termed as such... are not confined to the pentacostal church....
To qualify for federal money each such center must agree to offer a range of services by no means confined to bed treatment, and must make them available to all persons in a district who need and want them.
On the part of the minister there is an empathetic or phenomenological concern for the attitudes of all the other people (and their conditions such as broken arms) to all serious things, including Christian faith but not confined to it, regardless of the existing content of those views and conditions.
Since economic activities are confined within the preview of market, such exclusion will make them expendables.
Such seems to have been the experience of at least some of the hostages who endured up to five years imprisoned in confined cells in Lebanon in our time.
Details about such a witness in times like our own are not easy to infer from Bonhoeffer's reflections on his own extraordinary circumstances, but it is safe to say that it would not be confined to proclamation alone.
Perhaps the future will see Christians accepting that even those that don't believe in the Virgin Birth and being «saved» and such things not being confined to Hell.
This holds even though the occasion in question does not permit confining it to one or more relations to occasions but rather asserts its absolute character in contrast to any such relation.
The collective right to peace demands such a basic approach — in fact and law — that we can no longer afford to regard it merely as a sentimental concept or to confine it to an intellectual category of human rights.
It is as if the reality is such that it stubbornly refuses to be confined in a doctrine.
Once again we find in cosmological approaches such as Whitehead's and Berry's an acknowledgment of the pervasive creativity of nature, whereas existentialist and psychologically based theologies tend to confine creativity to humans (and God) alone.13
Are not such words confined in their reference to temporal and worldly events and experiences?
Such a submission to guilt is at bottom a submission to pain, or, rather, an attempt to lower the consciousness of pain by shrinking and confining the energy of life.
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.
Such samples, however, could not easily pick up what was incipient, especially what was radically new and as yet confined to only small groups.
Post-abortion counselling, as we know from experience in England, is something largely confined to those pro-life groups who accept that there is such a thing as post-abortion trauma.
... If there ever was a power on earth who had an eye for the times, who has confined himself to thepracticable, and has been happy in his anticipations, whose words have been deeds, and whose commands prophecies, such is he in the history of ages, who sits from generation to generation in the Chair of the Apostles, as the Vicar of Christ and Doctor of His Church.
In turn, this reflects the fact that the subjective aims of such entities are confined ordinarily very closely to what Whitehead calls «physical purposes» (PR 280, 406 ff.)
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