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Dictionary
to restraints
noun
Something that restrains, ties, fastens or secures
Exact(18)
"They are not open to restraints on the power of the party".
"Houston was never able to fire the cannon due to restraints imposed by the lease at Robertson Stadium".
Big banks say they must compete for staff with foreign firms that are not subject to restraints.
The device being used is an ingenious one: caving in to lawsuits by interests that object to restraints on environmental damage.
So, conceivably, a person who has not been charged or convicted of any serious offence, in fact may have been acquitted, can be subject to restraints on their liberty made on the basis of secret, untested, hearsay police evidence.
He and his research colleagues have found that people with more hierarchical, individualistic worldviews (generally conservatives) sense that accepting climate science would lead to restraints on commerce, something they highly value, so they often dismiss evidence of the risk.
Similar(42)
Meanwhile, federal stimulus is steadily giving way to restraint.
"We must avoid jeopardizing the recovery with a premature shift to restraint".
Then this program reversed the order of the previous night, moving from grandiosity to restraint.
She's played by Jan Maxwell, an actress not given to restraint.
Whatever happened to restraint and personal responsibility when managing expenses in a household?
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com