Similar words: confine, confinement, fined, refined, confirm, confide, confirmed, confident. Meaning: [-nd] adj. 1. not free to move about 2. enclosed by a confining fence 3. not invading healthy tissue 4. deprived of liberty; especially placed under arrest or restraint 5. in captivity.
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181. The following year, in Paris, Du Camp was ill, and confined to bed in his apartment.
182. Brett was eventually confined in a psychiatric hospital, where he committed suicide.
183. Suppose that initially the molecules are all confined to the left-hand side of the box by a partition.
184. This internal dialogue will not be confined to technical questions framed within the discipline.
185. The taste buds are confined to the tip, the sides and the back of the tongue only.
186. Our examples have been confined to simple homophonic chords in which all the notes sound together.
187. We pray for those who are confined to their homes for long periods.
188. Commercially viable deposits of lignite were confined to the area around Lough Neagh in the early 1980s.
189. After his arrest he was confined in the Tower of London, where, incidentally, his grandfather had been born.
190. The solvent-weld cement gives off powerful fumes and should not be used in a confined space.
191. The theory originates from experiments with rats in which the animals were confined in a small space and given electric shocks.
192. The third type seem to be solid, and are largely confined to the lower half of the main cloud.
193. However, it seems that the principle is not confined to such cases.
194. His heart was not strong either, and by the end of the month he was confined to his bed.
195. Because of the amount of hard rubbing needed to achieve a good finish, oil polishing is best confined to plain surfaces.
196. It is particularly important for older workers over the age of 50, but not confined to this group.
197. Once territories have been established by young fans, occupants are physically confined within them for the entire duration of the match.
198. The military survey of 1522, in theory at least, confined itself to ownership strictly defined.
199. The same is not true of working-class people, whose social contacts tend to be confined within particular settings.
200. Economic policy Research on corporatism has largely been confined to the level of the political centre of the nation state.
201. In far too many instances real hard preparatory work is confined to well trained union negotiators.
202. Rebel troops have confined their attacks mainly to the southern part of the country.
203. This increase was exclusively confined to the private sector which recorded a massive 115 percent increase in the number accommodated.
204. Production of Dunlop cheese has now been commercialised in creameries and is confined almost exclusively to the islands of Arran and Islay.
205. It developed into rheumatoid arthritis, but being confined to a wheelchair didn't stop Jackie marrying and bringing up three children.
206. The judge has confined the jury to their hotel until after the verdict.
207. They often had to be restricted in their activities or confined to quarters under police guard for their own protection.
208. Fruit is no longer confined to heavy syrup; you can find it in light syrup or packed in its own juice.
209. Up to 12% of these tumours still confined to the bowel wall have already spread to regional lymph nodes.
210. He held back at first,(sentencedict.com) but only until she was confined in the hospital at Leyden.
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