The intentional killing of civilians is proscribed, and so are military actions that show a gross disregard for the lives of innocents. |
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Newspapers and television viewing are largely proscribed and inmates are often unable to contact their families for months. |
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For example, battery under the common law was a general intent crime requiring the perp's awareness that he is acting in a proscribed manner. |
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These changes open the doors to many previously proscribed activities, including logging, road-building, oil drilling and even polluting. |
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Animal societies have proscribed behavior, and if you step outside of it too often or get too uppity you are ostracized. |
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Afraid he had not sacrificed in the proscribed manner, he squeezed his eyes shut and called out a prayer to God for deliverance. |
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The most frequent example of self-induced automatism is intoxication arising from the voluntary ingestion of alcohol or proscribed drugs. |
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Simple circular motion as proscribed by Aristotle did not satisfy the observations. |
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More than a few will also tell you that you've not truly lived until you've partaken of certain proscribed herbs while the sun sets. |
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When someone dies, we are proscribed from desecrating the body, which includes invasion of the corpse. |
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They were proscribed following an attack on one of Buddhism's most hallowed places of worship. |
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If we were proscribed we would go underground, and anything that's underground surfaces. |
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The contravention is complete when the conduct occurs for the proscribed purpose whether or not it achieves its objective. |
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During the premodern period, meat was proscribed under the tenets of Buddhism. |
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The latter include diuretics, cardiac dilators and a substance called pentoxifylline, usually proscribed for memory loss among the aged. |
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During the twelfth century the sculptural decoration, manuscript illumination, stone towers on churches and stained glass were all successively proscribed. |
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At the material time of that case, family status was not a proscribed ground of discrimination. |
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Nutrition of patients surpasses proscribed standards in comparison to detainees and prisoners. |
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Therefore this schedule of proscribed remedies should be rescinded as soon as possible, in our view. |
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The quinine-laced tonic water was proscribed as a malaria preventive, and the ingenious troops found adding gin made the nasty stuff slide right down. |
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Victimless crimes and indeterminate sentences were thus proscribed. |
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The god Seth, who had been an antithetic element in Egyptian religion, came gradually to be proscribed as the god of foreign lands. |
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The challenges to proscribed modes of gendered behaviour ushered in a fashion for androgyny and unisex style. |
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Ensure compliance with such list of proscribed services with regulatory requirements. |
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But it has been proscribed ever since, and has seemed a spent political force. |
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The former clause proscribed anyone from aiding the practice of prostitution, while the latter required the police to arrest and medically examine suspected prostitutes. |
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Last week the government released a list of 15 proscribed organisations. |
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Since 1949, the army has been proscribed as a permanent institution in our country. |
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The hands, arms and body are used in a proscribed way in virtually all signed languages. |
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Maybe the public will want it someday, but whatever happens, it must be democratically legitimate, not proscribed. |
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Their judicial power does not extend to cases which are hypothetical, or which are proscribed due to standing, mootness, or ripeness issues. |
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Then lending of money for interest was proscribed in 814, because it violated Church law. |
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After many years in which parties had been proscribed, it took a long time for political parties in most countries to regain strength and stature. |
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In order to justify state intervention, it is necessary to show that the proscribed action imposes some tangible harm upon some person other than the one who performs it. |
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The Consultation Document proposed to create a new power to proscribe organisations affiliated with any Mainland organisation that had been proscribed there on the grounds that it endangered national security. |
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Such an undertaking must be proscribed once for all. |
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By levying a fee for these sorts of peering arrangements, Comcast seems to be testing the waters for a solution which eschews the officially proscribed practices of throttling or filtering. |
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Metal clips, rubber bands and rubber based adhesives are proscribed. |
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The group is proscribed as a terrorist organisation by the UN because it operates as a front organisation for Lashkar-e-Taiba, the group that executed the 2008 attacks on the Indian city of Mumbai. |
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Before we get to that stage, the country must become a complete democracy, without political prisoners, without a prohibited media and without proscribed political parties. |
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The Audit Committee also establishes annually a list of proscribed services that may not be provided by the external auditors as a measure to safeguard their objectivity and independence. |
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Additionally, we must seriously consider the illegal use of weapons, such as white phosphorus, which are not proscribed as illegal under international law. |
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The disarmament focus is meant to link with initiatives in other areas to reinforce efforts against nuclear, chemical and other proscribed weapons. |
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Speech that threatens, justifies or advocates violence against an identifiable group should be proscribed whether or not violence is an immediate or likely consequence. |
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Colombia's national criminal justice system has made efforts in relation to those responsible for conduct proscribed by the Rome Statute, falling into several broad categories. |
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Lack of the mentioned is obstacle for application of proscribed standards. |
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There should be consistency and agreement on key issues such as how to define and identify brokers, as well as a uniform list of proscribed arms and a clear jurisdictional scope. |
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If principles are drafted in broad terms, with a view to covering changes that have not yet taken place, they may later provide limited direction on what is to be permitted or proscribed. |
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Although legally proscribed in 1994, the procedure is still widely practiced, as it is deeply ingrained in the local culture. |
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Caesar had not proscribed his enemies, instead pardoning almost all, and there was no serious public opposition to him. |
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Rewards for their arrest gave incentive for Romans to capture those proscribed, while the assets and properties of those arrested were seized by the triumvirs. |
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The estimation that 300 senators were proscribed was presented by Appian, although his earlier contemporary Livy asserted that only 130 senators had been proscribed. |
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This form of dress, proscribed after the 1745 rebellion against the English, became one of the seminal, potent and ubiquitous symbols of Scottish identity. |
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Europe after 1815 was on guard against a return of Jacobinism, and even liberal Britain saw the passage of the Six Acts in 1819, which proscribed radical activities. |
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