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.
Random good picture Not show
241. Earlier, Mrs Dart had sobbed as she recalled her daughter's fear of confined spaces.
242. Most firms regarded the cost as low and confined mainly to power used for pumping and to maintenance.
243. Firstly, it depicted the life of a mentally handicapped person as being unrewarding, unstimulating and confined.
244. The selling effort is not just confined to the Promotion element in the marketing mix.
245. In our confined chamber he seems larger than life, especially standing up.
246. Active volcanism at any one time is normally confined to a limited number of centres within a particular cluster.
247. Only replacement back Kenny Logan was an absentee, confined to bed suffering from the 24-hour flu bug.
248. She suffered from arthritis and was largely confined to her home.
249. Doctrinal issues were never ventilated, and the dispute was confined to questions of legal rights and political jurisdiction.
250. His interest in the workings of Washington was confined primarily to obtaining federal money and laws for Chicago.
251. Usually this didn't matter because the Parquet confined itself to criminal offences and there was no religious dimension involved.
252. Ancistrus species, although smaller than Hypostomus, show aggression when kept in confined spaces.
253. Ash rings are characteristic of submarine eruptions, but they are by no means confined to marine environments.
254. A modern police force was established in the 1860s, but until 1906 it remained largely confined to urban areas.
255. Upon their arrest Ershad and his wife were moved from the Army cantonment and confined to a diplomatic compound.
256. The single-subject academic course is largely confined to the universities, reflecting their traditions of specialized scholarship and their stronger research orientation.
257. This has a twin aim of befriending and loving those who are confined to their home all day every day.
258. The loss of ancient woodland now means they're confined to the southern counties and Herefordshire and Worcestershire.
259. Arraignment hearings normally last only a few minutes and are confined to formal identification of the accused and details of the charge.
260. His father went mad, and was confined to an asylum; maybe that was the disorder Hoover feared.
261. They are confined to discussions of a very general nature and to providing the resources necessary for an efficient service.
262. Dissent, hitherto confined to a number of intellectuals, became a mass phenomenon with the Protestant Church playing a leading role.
263. There are eighteen species of penguin worldwide, all confined to the southern hemisphere.
264. Argument before the House of Lords in B's appeal and the judgments were confined to the certified question.
265. Apparently, when Osceola protested too vigorously in June of 1835, Thompson confined him to jail for six days.
266. The Convention excludes consumer sales contracts; the Directive is confined to consumer credit agreements.
267. Groundwater in a confined aquifer is compressed elastically,(http://sentencedict.com/confined.html) rather like air in a tyre.
268. It is not confined to the area touched but shoots along the entire distribution of the nerve branch.
269. Even in death they were confined within the walls of the prison.
270. However, the descent into generality applies to all words, and is not confined to any one syntactic category.
More similar words: confine, confinement, fined, refined, confirm, confide, confirmed, confident, configure, confiscate, confidence, confiscation, configuration, confidentiality, contained, on fire, infinite, nonfiction, fine, ruined, define, grained, combined, finesse, strained, ordained, destined, purloined, determined, confuse.