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the constraining
verb
To force physically, by strong persuasion or pressurizing; to compel; to oblige.
Exact(60)
And she is inspired by the liberation that comes after the constraining perfectionism of youth.
They decide to found their own sorority, Kappa Nu, which breaks with the constraining norms of Greek life.
Rather, the shaky ground prepares the viewer, like the groom (played by Étaix), for the constraining misery and frantic flailing that follows.
But the plethora of incidents, together with the constraining embrace of De Sica's sympathies, reduce the film to its plot and truncate the characters' inner lives.
The aristocrat partially exempted craftsmen from taxes and, in an extraordinary initiative in pre-revolutionary Europe, freed employment from the constraining guild regulations.
These would occur when the constraining sensory input is switched off, by closing down the sensors, leaving the system free to be driven purely from the top down.
Equation (4) is the constraining condition.
The constraining layer markedly broadens the free layer damping peak.
The best information is that better tuned to the constraining affordances available.
McFadden suspects that the size of the nucleomorph's chromosomes may be the constraining factor.
Noticeable differences in the constraining of the parameters are found between different objective functions.
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