Synonym: censoring, security review. Similar words: ownership, membership, leadership, scholarship, partnership, sensor, sensory, citizenship. Meaning: ['sensərʃɪp /-səʃ-] n. 1. counterintelligence achieved by banning or deleting any information of value to the enemy 2. deleting parts of publications or correspondence or theatrical performances.
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91. Any attempt to stifle or fetter such criticism amounts to political censorship of the most insidious and objectionable kind.
92. His paper provides clear distinctions between book selection and censorship.
93. Censorship only exposes the offending article to a greater public.
94. Any films that are shown here have to pass government censorship.
95. With censorship dead for more than twelve years, it had no legal authority to review any private publications.
96. Part of the justification for censorship in the first place stemmed from competing conceptions of the priesthood.
97. They are united in the emphasis they place on the need to avoid all forms of censorship or control over cultural workers.
98. During the war, obtaining cable traffic presented no problem because of mandatory cable censorship.
99. Probably the clearest statements on book selection are by Lester Asheim in a defence of book selection against the charge of censorship.
100. Of course the above differentiation between book selection and censorship is a simplification.
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101. That way lie new injustices and the most insidious censorship of all - self-censorship.
102. The law dominated the field, but it did not operate through the simple mechanisms of censorship and repression.
103. Mr Gorbachev has three instruments that, he hopes, will make the press more pliant while falling short of complete censorship.
104. Censorship, dictated by the military and Catholic priests, cut a lot.
105. They figure this was a puritanical overreaction to a handful of innocent pictures and claim it raises the chilling specter of censorship.
106. Smith attended Oxford, where he complained about poor teaching and academic censorship.
107. Both stop short of demanding censorship, though Mary Whitehouse is characteristically less tentative.
108. I still have the news clippings from that, arguments, accusations of censorship.
109. Yet while some regulations are equivalent to censorship, others are not.
110. Access to the archives was jealously guarded, and censorship of counter-revolutionary distortions was instituted.
111. But this lack of censorship, self or otherwise, should be celebrated for the hard-won battle that it is.
112. On both occasions, Professor Jones stood firm against complaint and censorship.
113. A promise to end schoolbook censorship, made only a week ago, has already been withdrawn.
114. Most censorship decisions appear faintly ridiculous in the light of day.
115. The government found it expedient to slacken the grip of censorship in order to encourage loyal expressions of support for the Emancipation programme.
116. It might be argued therefore that library censorship is relatively unimportant.
117. The Bank denied the charges of censorship, and said the key messages of Prof Kanbur's draft had survived.
118. Many community leaders have called for censorship of the Internet.
119. He dissolved political parties, banned demonstrations and introduced strict media censorship.
120. The main theme of discussion was press censorship.
More similar words: ownership, membership, leadership, scholarship, partnership, sensor, sensory, citizenship, consort, sponsor, scissors, shipment, hardship, shipboard, internship, relationship, championship, apprenticeship, by fair means or foul, census, incense, license, condescension, harsh, or so, hip, dorsal, for sale, for sure, at worst.