Enforced
in sentence
301 examples of Enforced in a sentence
But what we believe, and what we argue in the book, is that there is no set of rules, no matter how detailed, no matter how specific, no matter how carefully monitored and enforced, there is no set of rules that will get us what we need.
Because the leaders in the government there in Honduras would need help from partner countries, who could benefit from partner countries who help them set up the rules in this charter and the enforcement, so everybody can trust that the charter really will be
enforced.
And disabled people around the world want laws like we have, and they want those laws
enforced.
I'm not just talking about laws on the books, but laws as they are
enforced
on the streets and laws as they are decided in the courts.
So, when I was a child, I don't know how many of you grew up in the '50s, but I was sent upstairs for an
enforced
rest.
And there I was, lying there in this tiny space, hot, dark, claustrophobic, matchbox-sized, behind my eyes, but it was really weird, like, after this went on for days, weeks, months, that space would get bigger and darker and cooler until I really looked forward to that half an hour of
enforced
immobility and rest, and I really looked forward to going to that place of darkness.
It's something that separates us from the Nazis at Nuremberg,
enforced
medical experimentation.
Stalin's
enforced
famines of the 1930s, the Holodomor, killed millions of Ukrainians, and they faced the Nazis in the '40s, who came through slashing, burning, raping, and in fact many of these women were shipped to Germany as forced labor.
And its first line of defense has to be our own standards, not those
enforced
on us by a censor or legislation, our own standards and our own integrity.
And another thing for Malawi, and not just Malawi but other countries: The laws which are there, you know how a law is not a law until it is
enforced?
Historically, we've been pulled into those spaces where we have not necessarily provided public safety but have
enforced
long, historical legislative racial desegregation.
And then the rules must be
enforced.
We had some informal constraints in place, but we
enforced
all of our trade with violence or social repercussions.
What if there actually were international laws with teeth that
enforced
end-of-life disposal of satellites instead of moving them out of the way as a temporary solution?
There were still laws for every way we used our privates while they pawed at the soft folds of us, grabbed with no concern for consent, no laws made for the men that
enforced
them.
Our first response was to try to change drivers' behavior, so we developed speed limits and
enforced
them through fines.
What we uncovered is that there are few rules to protect us and the ones we have are not being properly
enforced.
The first one is about data, because I have the impression that technology and data are changing the way competition takes place and the way competition regulation is designed and
enforced.
This curbed their temptations and
enforced
self-control, which prevented them from taking more risks.
Marine protected areas must also be
enforced.
And this was
enforced
by babe guards Mama Cax, Denise Bidot, Geena Rocero, Ericka Hart and Emme, all activists in their own right.
And it all got integrated, it all got
enforced.
And of course habits are
enforced
by architecture.
Joshua commanded his child-soldiers to commit unspeakable crimes, and
enforced
his command with great brutality.
And what I want to suggest is that, having talked to girls, because I just finished a new book called "I Am an Emotional Creature: The Secret Life of Girls Around the World," I've been talking to girls for five years, and one of the things that I've seen is true everywhere is that the verb that's been
enforced
on girl is the verb "to please."
And she made a decision as many women do across this planet, that what was done to her would not be
enforced
and done to other women and girls.
In some other countries, the OECD convention is not yet properly
enforced.
True: in the 60s block booking of films was still
enforced
on hapless suburban and country cinemas... this means that in order to get a good film the cinema was forced to run woeful timewasters like these: I remember well in 1974 keen to screen FIDDLER ON THE ROOF or something good like that, I was bailed up in the United Artists booking office by some sozzled salesman who waved a sheet of flops before me and squinted, bellowing: "Now before we get to that one, lemme see ya date these ones first".
Unlike the later rip-off, "On The Waterfront" which seemed to take some of the same themes and twist them to fit the
enforced
Hollywood political correctness of the time, it told its story direct and with respect for the characters and for the reality it fictionally reflected.
Is there justification for the
enforced
benefit and "happiness"?
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