单词 | restrictive clause |
例句 | Children's Minister Claire Coutinho has written to housing associations, social landlords and developers in England to urge them to review restrictive clauses in tenant contracts. Let childminders work in own homes, landlords urged 2023-08-21T04:00:00Z He also said diners plausibly alleged that Grubhub and Uber Eats' more restrictive clauses discouraged restaurants from using other platforms, despite their need to generate enough sales to stay afloat and offset low profit margins. Grubhub, Uber Eats, Postmates must face diners' lawsuit over U.S. restaurant prices 2022-03-30T04:00:00Z One possible sign of some success: On Sunday, the Georgia Chamber of Commerce, whose members include those companies, expressed “concern and opposition” to restrictive clauses in two Republican bills. For Voting Rights Advocates, a ‘Once in a Generation Moment’ Looms 2021-03-15T04:00:00Z Hospitals and clinics may justify restrictive clauses as a way to protect their investments in physicians, says David Meltzer, an economist and primary-care physician at the University of Chicago. Your longtime doctor moves. Will you lose that physician because of a noncompete clause? 2019-06-07T04:00:00Z The commission found that Google and its parent company, Alphabet, breached EU antitrust rules by imposing restrictive clauses in contracts with websites that used AdSense, preventing Google rivals from placing their ads on these sites. EU fines Google $1.7 billion for abusing online ads market 2019-03-20T04:00:00Z “There’s restrictive clauses in there. . There’s a guarantee that it will remain as a public facility and the assembly agreed.” Small Alaska village works to keep services, infrastructure 2017-06-10T04:00:00Z A restrictive clause does not want to be separate from what it modifies: it wants to be one with it, to be essential to it, to identify with it totally. Confessions of a Comma Queen 2015-02-16T05:00:00Z The downside of such provisions is that replacement banks aware of a company's desperation may charge higher rates or include more restrictive clauses in a loan agreement, he said. Analysis: Companies assess bank relations after Moody's move 2012-06-21T22:34:21Z But restrictive clauses are increasingly raising new questions for doctors. Your longtime doctor moves. Will you lose that physician because of a noncompete clause? 2019-06-07T04:00:00Z And the rule "To count each as one, no more," may receive the restrictive clause "in so far as the good of the whole of society is not diminished by so doing." A Review of the Systems of Ethics Founded on the Theory of Evolution 2012-03-17T02:01:00.033Z A restrictive clause, because it restricts the meaning of the word it modifies, may not be omitted. Business English A Practice Book 2011-11-19T03:00:25.507Z Yet, sir, gentlemen on the other side propose to construe the Constitution as if there were really there a restrictive clause against the admission of any more slave States. The Slavery Question Speech of Hon. John M. Landrum, of La., Delivered in the House of Representatives, April 27, 1860 2011-03-24T02:00:14.150Z The debate opened on an amendment by Senator Hale to the Appropriation bill before the Senate to repeal the restrictive clause of the Kansas Admission act. Presidential Candidates: containing Sketches, Biographical, Personal and Political, of Prominent Candidates for the Presidency in 1860 2011-02-27T03:00:34.390Z And in case no suit should be commenced, the General Conference recommended to the Annual Conferences so to suspend the "restrictive clause" as to authorize a voluntary arbitration. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 3, July, 1851 Use the comma to set off explanatory or non-restrictive clauses, but not to set off restrictive clauses. Practical Grammar and Composition To distinguish an appositive clause from a restrictive clause, the former is called a non-restrictive clause. Business English A Practice Book 2011-11-19T03:00:25.507Z A restrictive clause is not separated by a comma from the noun. The Verbalist A Manual Devoted to Brief Discussions of the Right and the Wrong Use of Words and to Some Other Matters of Interest to Those Who Would Speak and Write with Propriety. It contains both a co-ordinate clause, "Which borrows its title," &c., and a restrictive clause, "Which can be considered as a voluntary effusion." "Stops", Or How to Punctuate A Practical Handbook for Writers and Students But the restrictive clause in the territorial bills satisfied the radical Southerners as little as it pleased Douglas. Stephen A. Douglas A Study in American Politics The former is called a restrictive clause, and the latter, a non-restrictive clause. Composition-Rhetoric A restrictive clause is one, therefore, that is needed to make the meaning of the sentence clear. Business English A Practice Book 2011-11-19T03:00:25.507Z The use of 'that' solely as restrictive, with 'who' and 'which' solely as coördinating, also avoids ambiguities that often attend the indiscriminate use of 'who' and 'which' for coördinate and for restrictive clauses. The Verbalist A Manual Devoted to Brief Discussions of the Right and the Wrong Use of Words and to Some Other Matters of Interest to Those Who Would Speak and Write with Propriety. The wide use of who and which in restrictive clauses is not accounted for by saying that they occur after this, these, those, and that, and hence are used to avoid disagreeable repetitions of sounds. Higher Lessons in English A work on English grammar and composition The Chairs told me Lord W. Bentinck had extended to all persons the benefit of the regulation as to coffee planters, omitting, however, all the restrictive clauses. A Political Diary 1828-1830, Volume II Which is likewise used in restrictive clauses that limit or explain the antecedent; as, 'The house which he built still remains.' The Verbalist A Manual Devoted to Brief Discussions of the Right and the Wrong Use of Words and to Some Other Matters of Interest to Those Who Would Speak and Write with Propriety. |
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