Betekenis van:
restricted

restricted
Bijvoeglijk naamwoord
  • iets anders uitsluitend
  • the lowest level of official classification for documents
restricted
Bijvoeglijk naamwoord
  • niet overal verkrijgbaar
  • the lowest level of official classification for documents

Hyperoniemen

restricted
Bijvoeglijk naamwoord
    • subject to restriction or subjected to restriction
    "of restricted importance"
    restricted
    Bijvoeglijk naamwoord
      • restricted in meaning; (as e.g. `man' in `a tall man')

      Synoniemen

      Werkwoord


      Voorbeeldzinnen

      1. Immigration is restricted.
      2. This is a restricted area.
      3. Entrance is restricted to those above 18.
      4. The police restricted access to the road.
      5. Freedom of speech was tightly restricted.
      6. Freedom of speech was restricted in this country.
      7. Why do you have such a restricted imagination?
      8. Freedom of speech is restricted in some countries.
      9. He restricted his drinking to one beer a day.
      10. Sperm bank regulations restricted a given donor to making sperm donations at only one facility and restricted the number of children that each donor could "father".
      11. But today smoking in public places is forbidden or strictly restricted.
      12. Single people enjoy more freedom to do what they want and enjoy living a less restricted social life.
      13. The animal lacks both anxiety and hope because its consciousness is restricted to what is clearly evident and thus to the present moment: the animal is the present incarnate.
      14. Love is like some fresh spring, that leaves its cresses, its gravel bed and flowers to become first a stream and then a river, changing its aspect and its nature as it flows to plunge itself in some boundless ocean, where restricted natures only find monotony, but where great souls are engulfed in endless contemplation.
      15. Let me add some words about sentence fusion. A human is given two sentences and asked to produce a single coherent sentence that contains only the important information from the original two. This is a highly constrained summarization task. Investigations — carried out by Hal Daume and Daniel Marcu — has shown "that even at this restricted level, there is no measurable agreement between humans regarding what information should be considered important."