Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
But there is no such thing as "our own lives" in that narrow sense.
I mean, a believer in the narrow sense of the word.
The term sword is here used in a narrow sense.
It doesn't make children different from their parents, but rather, in this one narrow sense, just like them.
Only in the narrowest sense could he be viewed as right.
But his teaching, in the narrower sense, was equally good.
That is a proposition the administration does not, in a narrow sense, seem to dispute.
But culture in the narrower sense of the term also needs to be addressed.
The description given above applies to the family in this narrow sense.
What a narrow sense of rock they must get.
In this narrow sense, however, the word gentleman has long since become obsolete.
This model assumes that people are selfish in the narrow sense.
There are important parts of these processes to which this narrow sense is relevant.
Mark Twain himself has been dead now, in the narrowest sense, for 97 years.
Should it be interpreted in a broader or a narrower sense?
In the narrow sense, it failed to achieve its specific aims.
In a narrow sense, foreign direct investment refers just to building new facilities.
This second principle is love, or sanctification in the narrow sense.
In this particular narrow sense, Section 377 did not discriminate against homosexuals.
It fails to instruct in the narrow sense of the term.
All those statements were, in the narrow sense, true.
It's in the smaller, narrower sense that things start breaking apart.
But the isolationists were right only in the narrowest sense.
The gamble was first and foremost political in the narrowest sense of the word.
In a narrow sense, restrictive conditions are those registered restrictions on the use of land.
This was an older narrow definition, in fact the only one until a few years ago.
This article deals with the place in the narrow definition.
It also set a narrower definition of the term in the process.
The second difficulty is the narrow definition of the problem as a safety one.
It is a more narrow definition of a plate appearance.
First, it is possible that a too narrow definition of comparative costs would be used.
Another problem law firms face is a particularly narrow definition of sexual harassment.
It may be music but it is a very narrow definition of the word.
Pyramid partners advocate a very narrow definition of environmental law.
"I wondered if you had considered a narrow definition data bomb.
Narrower definitions vary based on how old a car must be to qualify.
The real problem is that the Coalition has adopted a very narrow definition of social mobility.
In its most narrow definition, historical musicology is the music history of Western culture.
From those incomplete records we still have, it's clear that human once had a much narrower definition.
The ball club asked for a narrower definition, which the judge essentially accepted.
This narrower definition has not been accepted by history.
Yes, why wouldn't more people fit into your apparently narrow definition of what a "good" product is?
You have listed 403 "community" schemes - which is a much narrower definition.
I think there was a very narrow definition of what was considered news."
This narrow definition makes a mockery of attempts to improve educational quality.
However, other pundits take issue with this narrow definition of Chicago-style politics.
It then noted that a narrow definition of jurisdiction is not warranted in the international context.
"But," she went on, "that's a very narrow definition of what caused Sept. 11."
He used, Japanese officials said later, a narrow definition of the banks' capital that put their condition in the most perilous light.
Independent surveys estimate a lower access rate using a narrower definition of supply.