Coartado in english

Coated

pronunciation: koʊtəd part of speech: adjective
In gestures

coartar = anchor ; restrict ; tie down ; cripple ; frustrate ; dam (up) ; shackle ; box in ; hamstring ; fetter ; hem + Nombre + in ; chill ; cramp ; emasculate. 

Example: One can now picture a future investigator in his laboratory, his hands are free, he is not anchored.Example: This is an example of a classification which is restricted to a specific physical form, as it is used to classify maps and atlases.Example: There are many able people still tied down with the routine 'running' of their libraries.Example: The objection to it seems to be that by reading rubbish children cripple their own imaginative, linguistic or moral powers.Example: The psychologist Abraham H Maslow has warned of 'true psychopathological effects when the cognitive needs are frustrated'.Example: But to prevent any meandering at all, or to dam the flow of talk too soon and too often by intruding, generally only frustrates spontaneity = But to prevent any meandering at all, or to dam the flow of talk too soon and too often by intruding, generally only frustrates spontaneity.Example: Tom Sutherland, a professor at the American University of Beirut, was kidnapped in 1985 and held prisoner for six and a half years, for much of the time shackled to his prisoner Terry Anderson.Example: What is important is that agencies face few barriers to disseminating information on the Web quickly rather than being boxed in by standardization requirements = What is important is that agencies face few barriers to disseminating information on the Web quickly rather than being boxed in by standardization requirements.Example: Instead, the proposed regulations would hamstring public access.Example: Faculty tenure is designed to allow the scholar to proceed with his investigation without being fettered with concerns arising from loss of job and salary.Example: The world of work is no longer constrained by the four physical dimensions of space and time that have hemmed us in for most of recorded history.Example: This would chill the freedom of inquiry that is central to the academic process and that is, moreover, privileged by the First Amendment.Example: They used schools as a buttress of a caste system designed to subordinate blacks socially, to cramp them economically under a rigid job ceiling.Example: So anything that curtails a man's freedom emasculates him.

more:

» coartar el avance de Algohinder + progress .

Example: However, in Belgium lack of suitable manpower hinders similar progress.

» coartar el progreso de Algohinder + progress .

Example: However, in Belgium lack of suitable manpower hinders similar progress.

Coartado synonyms

clad in spanish: vestido, pronunciation: klæd part of speech: adjective oily in spanish: aceitoso, pronunciation: ɔɪli part of speech: adjective glazed in spanish: vidriado, pronunciation: gleɪzd part of speech: adjective backed in spanish: Respaldados, pronunciation: bækt part of speech: adjective clothed in spanish: vestido, pronunciation: kloʊðd part of speech: adjective
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