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stricter and view
Conservative Protestants take a stricter view of the nature of marriage.
As such Dorff's teshuvah states that synagogues should hold themselves to a stricter standard so that all in the Jewish community will view the synagogue's kitchen as fully kosher.
In January 2005, Pierre Mazeaud, then president of the Council, announced that the Council would take a stricter view of language of a non-prescriptive character introduced in laws, sometimes known as " legislative neutrons ".< ref name =" Foyer "> Proceedings of the National Assembly, 21 June 1982, third sitting, Jean Foyer: « Cette semaine, le ministre d ' État, ministre de la recherche et de la technologie, nous présente un projet dont je dirai, ne parlant pas latin pour une fois, mais empruntant ma terminologie à la langue des physiciens, qu ' il est pour l ' essentiel un assemblage de neutrons législatifs, je veux dire de textes dont la charge juridique est nulle.
Speier believes in a stricter view of gun control.
In the Middle Ages, the Church took a stricter view of same-sex relations between women.

stricter and is
While capital adequacy is important, it is defined and regulated by the Bank for International Settlements, and central banks in practice generally do not apply stricter rules.
However, this stricter version of diet is often practiced only on special occasions.
No import permit is necessary for these species under CITES, although some Parties do require import permits as part of their stricter domestic measures.
When sold in another country, Canadian whisky is typically also required to conform to the local product requirements that apply to whisky in general when sold in that country, which may in some aspects involve stricter standards than the Canadian law.
All Christian monasticism stems, either directly or indirectly, from the Egyptian example: Saint Basil the Great Archbishop of Caesaria of Cappadocia, founder and organizer of the monastic movement in Asia Minor, visited Egypt around AD 357 and his rule is followed by the Eastern Orthodox Churches ; Saint Jerome who translated the Bible into Latin, came to Egypt, while en route to Jerusalem, around AD 400 and left details of his experiences in his letters ; Benedict founded the Benedictine Order in the 6th century on the model of Saint Pachomius, but in a stricter form.
More recently, however, different classes of spontaneous magnetization have been identified when there is more than one magnetic ion per primitive cell of the material, leading to a stricter definition of " ferromagnetism " that is often used to distinguish it from ferrimagnetism.
The reason for stricter dietary observance on these eleven days is that the probability of the finalisation of the next birth is much more on these days compared to the other days.
A stricter interpretation does not equate the two, as the mass of a single molecule is not the same as the average of an ensemble.
Even so, it is obvious that Watson has stricter limits than Holmes, and occasionally berated Holmes for creating a " poisonous atmosphere " of tobacco smoke.
* Spirit whisky, which is a mixture of neutral spirits and at least 5 % of certain stricter categories of whisky.
* July 18 – Actress Rebecca Schaeffer is murdered by an obsessed fan, leading to stricter stalking laws in California.
The field of compressed sensing provides a stricter sampling condition when the underlying signal is known to be sparse.
Despite this restriction, gnuplot is accepted and used by many GNU packages and is widely included in GNU / Linux distributions including the stricter ones such as Debian and Fedora.
In stricter scientific applications, biomass is measured as the mass of organically bound carbon ( C ) that is present.
This is a form of triangle inequality, with n, n, and the goal G < sub > n </ sub > closest to n. Because every monotonic heuristic is also admissible, monotonicity is a stricter requirement than admissibility.
Research is ongoing in its use to treat other cancers and autoimmune conditions, although its use is controversial ; the thalidomide tragedy led to much stricter testing being introduced for drug and pesticide licensing.

stricter and held
Much of the research conducted around the middle of the 20th century occurred in the former Eastern Bloc before the cold war ended and has not held up to the scrutiny of stricter Western scientific standards.
First Class goddesses are held to a stricter standard regarding the prohibition to lie.
However, due to Health and Safety laws the staff have tended to become stricter about what responsibilities prefects may hold, for fear of being held responsible in case of litigation.
Some historians consider the Old Regular Baptist a branch of the Primitive Baptist that held to a stricter order but more liberal in doctrine, allowing for different views on the atonement.
: Beyond the Lygians dwell the Gothones, under the rule of a king ; and thence held in subjection somewhat stricter than the other German nations, yet not so strict as to extinguish all their liberty.
Congress agreed he had standing to sue and ordered the USDA to enact stricter policies and enforce the psychological well-being of primates being held in captivity.
The want of a positive creed tended to make many of the stricter Protestant churchmen doubtful of the usefulness of the union, and the stricter Lutherans have always held aloof from it.

stricter and by
Domestically, he vowed to support continued liberalization of the economy, increase investment in human capital and infrastructure, establish an independent central bank, and increase revenue by stricter enforcement of tax collections rather than increasing taxation.
In earlier days, when Jews had a functioning court system ( the beth din and the Sanhedrin high court ), courts were empowered to administer physical punishments for various violations, upon conviction by far stricter standards of evidence than are acceptable in courts in modern democracies: execution, corporal punishment, incarceration, excommunication.
The Act also curbed the scope of expert psychiatric testimony and adopted stricter procedures regarding the hospitalization and release of those who found not guilty by reason of insanity.
Shortly after that, when the temple was destroyed by fire, Julian suspected the Christians and ordered stricter investigations than usual.
In the 20th century, a segment of the Orthodox population ( notably as represented by the World Agudath Israel movement formally established in 1912 ) disagreed with Modern Orthodoxy and took a stricter approach.
Turkey has long been known for its promotion of secularism, and has continued to introduce measures that have placed even stricter bars on polygamy, also by the ruling moderate Islamist AK Parti as well.
While Boniface was not able to safeguard the church from property seizures by the local nobility, he did achieve one goal, the adoption of stricter guidelines for the Frankish clergy, which often hailed directly from the nobility.
The Graces managed to survive " a protracted and stormy meeting " with E. M. retaining his key post as club secretary, although he was forced to liaise in future with a new finance committee and abide by stricter rules.
One of the early motivations behind trusted computing was a desire by media and software corporations for stricter digital rights management technology to prevent users from freely sharing and using potentially copyrighted or private files without explicit permission.
An amendment which allowed licensed hunting under stricter conditions, advocated by the then Prime Minister Tony Blair and some members of the government's independent inquiry on fox hunting ( including its chairman Lord Burns ), was voted down.
Ranchers were hurt by mavericking ( taking lost, unbranded calves from other ranchers ' herds ), and responded by organizing cooperative roundups, blacklisting, and lobbying for stricter anti-maverick laws.
However, during the early 1930s, stricter censorship rules enforced by the new Production Code in 1934 required animation producers to remove risqué humor.
"' As if in a chain reaction, one week later the Motion Picture Commission for the city of Milwaukee also banned the film as part of a new policy encouraged by police for " ' stricter regulation of undesirable films.
Thirdly there has been a push in the last decade by consumers, for companies to adopt stricter environmental regulations, making the incorporation of ISO 14001 a greater necessity for the long term viability of businesses ( Delmas & Montiel 2009 ) and providing them with a competitive advantage against companies that do not adopt the standard ( Potoki & Prakash, 2005 ).
The Marcher Lords were progressively tied to the English kings by the grants of lands and lordships in England, where control was stricter, and where many marcher lords spent most of their time, and through the English kings ' dynastic alliances with the great magnates.
The furore created by the response to video nasties led to the introduction of the Video Recordings Act 1984 which imposed a stricter code of censorship on videos than was required for cinema release.
Louis XIV, impressed as a young ruler with the experience of the Fronde, came to reorganize French fighting forces under a stricter hierarchy whose leaders ultimately could be made or unmade by the King.
* The contention that the social sciences, such as economics and sociology, are only properly sciences when they abide by the somewhat stricter interpretation of scientific method used by the natural sciences, and that otherwise they are not truly sciences.

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