How To Use Fetter In A Sentence

  • In writing poetry, one is unfettered by the normal rules of sentence structure.
  • Rather, he is to function as an imperial proconsul, wielding unfettered power over a militarily occupied country.
  • The principle thus given is of great importance and ought not, in my opinion, to be unduly fettered or restricted.
  • Those blend at the chip with unfettered laser light to create a hologram of the tumor interior.
  • His diplomatic role ensured unfettered access to leading players. The Sun
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  • During the seven weeks he served at the fort, Fetterman grew increasingly insubordinate and desperate to prove his superiority in battle.
  • For one individual to have so much unfettered power goes against all sense of natural Justice. Times, Sunday Times
  • But the Philistines took him, and put out his eyes, and brought him down to Gaza, and bound him with fetters of brass; and he did grind in the prison house.
  • Radio, TV and newspapers remain uncensored, unfettered and unthreatened by the government. Easter Lemming Liberal News
  • Wilberforce was quite prepared to allow science unfettered freedom to research, and to accepts its findings, just because he did not think that science was the sole truth; if facts emerged which proved that men were descended from some primordial fungus, he could agree, but go on to enter a further ` but ', and adduce further considerations that marked humanity off from the rest of creation. May 7th, 2009
  • Because, in my opinion, nescient arm-chair security analysts with an axe to grind sure as hell shouldn't be able to declassify thousands of government documents and unfetter them into cyberspace. Michael Hughes: WikiStan: Do We Want Julian Assange on That Wall?
  • I really think that more research and fettering is required in the selection of abbv for someone's political hmmm ... motivation? OMG! Free MILF porn
  • She would read, she would write, and she would be free from 'unhealthful, uncomfortable ... inconvenient ... fettering, hampering, monstrous skirts'. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Their ideal was the totally autonomous modern artist unfettered by ancestors, tradition, or nature.
  • I miss the innocent giggle and the unfettered laughter that used to be more forthcoming.
  • This is true by definition, for different individuals will always want and desire different and incompatible things and their unfettered pursuit of their own objectives will inevitably bring them into conflict.
  • Through the solid floor of the abode, the chill of winter seeped in, fettered little by the meagre warmth provided by the fire.
  • Dear Mollie -- I was glad to know that bound with the fetters of Science, and depressed by thought, you were Struggling yet to ascend the rugged Steep -- where "Star eyed Science" and fame unfold their banners to every anxious aspirant, and under whose folds of magnitude and magnificence all alike are permitted to recumb, and recur those who have in vagrancy strayed "tracing Shadows" -- beware of Letter from Young John Allen to Mollie Houston,June 2, 1854
  • “What mechanisms currently exist or ought to exist to allow Good Scientists to continue their Good Work unfettered by big oil tricksterism, such as FOI requests, fake “audits”, FUDtank misinformation, the cyberwars, etc. – all of which are designed to serve the interests of the rich & powerful, not society at large?” Unthreaded #9 « Climate Audit
  • alleluia;" they clapped their hands, leaped up, fell down, clasped each other in their free arms, cried, laughed, and went to and fro, tossing upward their unfettered hands; but high above the whole there was a mighty sound which ever and anon swelled up; it was the utterings in broken negro dialect of gratitude to God. The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus
  • Free speech advocates from Diogenes the Cynic to Frank Zappa have urged libertarian openness, arguing that unfettered expression is both the right and the duty of free people.
  • I am appalled he would sanction the introduction of legislation such as this which, as Deputy Dukes said, will fetter the members of the House now and in the future.
  • Most of us recognize the sense of comfort we feel when we arrive at a place where we are loved, a sense of ... de-burdening - the load lightens, the stress fades away, words flow smoothly, smiles are more frequent, expressiveness is more unfettered ... Acceptance
  • But it cannot, nor does it attempt to, impose fetters on the obligations of police authorities to pass information between each other.
  • Thou think'st them to o'ertake, Thou thinkest to overtake them, for all thou'rt fettered fast; while thou bearest Thy sins from thy desire Follies, which slay thee whatso do hinder thee, perdie. way thou farest. The Life of Sir Richard Burton
  • A diablesse can be recognised from the fact that her left foot is cloven, and that under her skirts can be glimpsed heavy steel fetters.
  • All business: Their last gargled gasp of protest sealed my end of the deal, loosing my fetters to fly away home. My Respects
  • He constantly pondered upon the possibilities through which his friend might be freed from the shackles that bound him to the effeminate serfdom of idleness; but the magic that could unrivet those fetters had not yet been revealed. Fairy Fingers A Novel
  • I will further spare four out of the seven figures of less note: emphasis, enallage, and the hysteron proteron you must have; because emphasis graces Irish diction, enallage unbinds it from strict grammatical fetters, and hysteron proteron allows it sometimes to put the cart before the horse. Tales and Novels — Volume 04
  • There would he lay till they would him descry, spancelled down upon a blossomy bed, at one foule stretch, amongst the daffydowndillies, the flowers of narcosis fourfettering his footlights, a halohedge of wild spuds hovering over him, epicures waltzing with gardenfillers, puritan shoots advancing to Aran chiefs. Finnegans Wake
  • As an ethical concept, the metaphysical concept of "fidelity" tries to fetter translation onto the two poles of "faithful" and "unfaithful", thus incurring a number of insolvable problems.
  • Martin Luther King Jr. was the major leader of the civil rights movement in the Untied States, not an unfettered Roman Catholic cleric.
  • It is for this string of real life problems that young people demanded unfettered media latitude to have their voice megaphoned far and wide on issues close to their chest.
  • That would be a tragedy for Parliament and the people who place their trust in us, who see us as their last protection from the unfettered power of an untrammelled executive, when we have no written constitution.
  • I wanted to drift like an unfettered balloon into the future.
  • And you will see the criminals that Day bound together in fetters.
  • I hope that I may yet find the rare chances to forget that I am an old, tired man who was enfettered by too many obligations.
  • The unfettered, pluralistic nature of the Internet is also changing the locus of power of the news media.
  • Par of Fettercairn, which is almost equidistant from Aberdeen and Dundee, is a conservation area with many of its buildings dating from the 18th century.
  • She followed obediently, moving in ridiculously small steps because her ankles were fettered to her waist.
  • Today you too could be in Paradise, free to do the Lord's work without the fetters of this mortal flesh. THE GOSPEL MAKERS
  • There are now new fetters on some of our freedoms, most we don't notice till we run into them.
  • To attempt to place upon the idea the fetters of an exact verbal formula could never have been sound.
  • Consumers instead flock to unauthorized sites offering unfettered music for free.
  • Because of the delicate nature of contemporary analysis, there is a penchant to lean in either of two ways: hagiography or unfettered antagonism.
  • Licensing, legal threats and intimidation directed at journalists all fetter press freedom.
  • Reform will be deepened to remove the institutional obstacles that fetter the development of productive forces.
  • What I do envy, self-possessed control freak that I am, is other people's ability to lose themselves in unfettered delight.
  • I should have the right to litigate the matter of consent to adoption freely, unfettered in any way by the Family Court or its decisions.
  • In writing poetry, one is unfettered by the normal rules of sentence structure.
  • And they call US ridiculous ... was "fettered" by government regulation. From On High
  • A free and unfettered press is the cornerstone of democracy and free speech. Times, Sunday Times
  • The plan to demolish an unlisted two-storey building in Fetter Lane, off Skeldergate, and replace it with a three and four-storey property in its place, was approved.
  • Unfortunately they are fettered and shackled, and have become mouthpieces and lackeys of whoever wants to promote a message.
  • For the corruption of weak choices results in a chain of habit being formed, which fetters the character and becomes second nature, flawed or ‘vitiated’ nature.
  • They are fettered and gyved by what they have said and done. Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great - Volume 11 Little Journeys to the Homes of Great Businessmen
  • We divested ourselves of the fetters of daily workwear and suitably wrapped in kimono style robes approached the tub.
  • The act released his physical energies without unfettering his will; his mind was still spellbound, but his powerful body and agile limbs, endowed with a blind, insensate life of their own, resisted stoutly and well.
  • In my judgment to impose such an obligation on a secured creditor would impose a serious fetter on the freedom of the secured creditor to exercise his power of sale over the charged property at the time and in the manner he chooses.
  • It never will save a man from sin; never break a fetter, or dash away a wine-cup. The Harvest of Years
  • Phil, I take your point, but Switzerland, for one, seems to be managing very nicely without being fettered by EU thraldom. On Thursday, the Legg report will be published along with...
  • The myriad worlds of fantasy and science fiction are where our spirits are free to frolic unfettered by the weight of sin.
  • One should give up anger; one should abandon pride; one should overcome all fetters. I'll never befall him who clings not to mind and body and is passionless.
  • One should give up anger; one should abandon pride; one should overcome all fetters. I'll never befall him who clings not to mind and body and is passionless.
  • I do not enumerate his amazing successes in guiding the ship of state through as heavy a storm as ever beat and blew; in leading us to conclusions of the most wonderful character, as official commander-in chief of the power of the nation; in emancipating from the fetters of slavery an entire race of human beings. The Death of President Lincoln
  • But he must be left unfettered to chart his own course, do the job as a true political leader and with all the powers normally associated with true leadership.
  • It is contrary to the public interest because to admit such actions would place an undesirable fetter on freedom of speech.
  • Unfettered by the strictures of plot, the movie homes in on local talent and captures the attitude towards taming the islands' cold waters.
  • There is an unfettered, unsuppressed subconscious mind at work in her arrangements.
  • Their obvious unfettered delight in denigrating these two prominent citizens made me feel sick.
  • Therefore we can not make the apriori assertion that private ownership and unfettered operation is always more efficient.
  • He boldly broke all fetters that hindered his liberty in preaching and in teaching.
  • A husky black version and a slender white one reveal their forms unfettered by chroma.
  • By reading the amendment backwards, Scalia begins with an unfettered right "to keep and bear arms" (look, that's what it says!), and, having established such a right, the mere "prefatory" words of the first half of the amendment become nothing more than window dressing. Adam Freedman: DC v. Heller: Scalia's Decision Will Backfire
  • Yes, and then the distinction between substantive fetters on powers and manner and form provisions that deal with the way in which powers are to be exercised is one that will come to the fore.
  • If you propose to become a tyrant over him, ... do your best to poison him with a theory of morals against nature; impose every kind of fetter on him; embarrass his movements with a thousand obstacles; place phantoms around him to frighten him .... The Ancient Regime
  • It is said that the fetter on judicial review unlawfully discriminates against non-nationals on the ground of their nationality.
  • This run of pointed paronomasia comes to a head in ‘fetters,’ which gathers to itself the accumulated sense, minted in the interests of others, of discursive abstractions that bind.
  • They were convinced that autonomy meant unfettered creativity.
  • The handsome, calligraphic script corresponds visually with Vega's unfettered strokes of paint, adding to the formal interest of these works.
  • If you're a conservative and you're gratified that the administration seems unfettered by political correctness in toughening up the nation's defenses, don't be so gratified.
  • The market will become unfettered by regulation - the modest controls on the internet to protect consumers, for example, are to be dumped on the grounds that they impose burdens on business.
  • At the prison door, while fetters were being fastened on his legs he smilingly said, "I fear me I shall be overproud of my boots. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 8: Infamy-Lapparent
  • The air was an ancient Gaelic melody, and the words, which were supposed to be very old, were in the same language; but we subjoin a translation of them, by Secundus Macpherson, Esq. of Glenforgen, which, although submitted to the fetters of English rhythm, we trust will be found nearly as genuine as the version of Ossian by his celebrated namesake. A Legend of Montrose
  • Public health policy should be based on a thorough and critical review of the scientific evidence by open minds unfettered by custom and dogma.
  • If Carrington had ordered Fetterman to simply relieve the wood train, there was no point in Fetterman leading his mission in the direction of the ridge-away from the woodcutters.
  • Strange looking ships set sail from ports to vanish over the horizon, unfettered by the lethal and unnavigable reefs that so restrained the Hub ports.
  • Apparently, in the British Isles, another wild allium, allium ursinum, grows unfettered by cultivation, and is colloquially called a ramsen or ramson. Tigers & Strawberries » Appalachian Wild Leeks
  • These clever Egyptian fetters we contingency break/Or remove myself in bondage," says Antony, reprogrammed for a impulse as a responsible Roman. Archive 2009-11-01
  • It is ‘so full of exceptions no one will ever know if it will unfetter the market,’ he said.
  • Discipline was maintained by a free application of whips, fetters, stocks, manacles, chains and the kongo, an iron collar with a long beam.
  • A moment more and I had fettered him to the granite.
  • This psychological "fettering" of the Soviet military was labeled the "Tbilisi syndrome. Book Review: The Kremlin and the High Command: Presidential Impact on the Russian Military from Gorbachev to Putin
  • The spirit of open and unfettered academic inquiry must be preserved.
  • This does not mean that we wish to fetter the trade union movement.
  • It relieved humanity of the heavy load under which it was groaning and broke the fetters unjust rulers and ignorant lawgivers had put around its feet.
  • Cable television and the prospects of its narrowcasting have also played an important role, making the three networks truly dinosaurs and largely the buffoons of fettered broadcasting.
  • And unfettered advocacy for one, as you espouse, is clearly more Orwellian. Mark Steyn Debates Complainants : Law is Cool
  • They are as stanch and resolved in their hatred of the domestic institution as when we abolished the accursed slave traffic; as when, at a vast sacrifice, both of money and of colonial prosperity, we struck the last fetter from the last English slave; as when the women of England, half a million strong, sent out a generous if not a wise remonstrance to the women of America. London: Saturday, January 17, 1863
  • Constitution to fetter the hands of conscientious loyalty in grappling with them, is a political creed which argues ill for the patriotism of its confessors; but it embodies the exact logic of those who look upon The Assassinated President
  • Or maybe it's in the unfettered guiltlessness of how everyone acts.
  • At a place called "Dick's Tree," not far from Longtown, there still stands the "smiddy" where lived the blacksmith who had the honour of knocking off Kinmont Willie's fetters. Stories of the Border Marches
  • For oftentimes it had caught him: and he was kept bound with chains and in fetters; and he brake the bands, and was driven of the devil into the wilderness.
  • I'd like to propose a toast to unfettered, abandoned appetite.
  • But perhaps more significantly, never has a single event so affected people's appreciation of their freedom to fly from place to place unfettered.
  • Palin: “Being here with you Brit, the Fox family expanded out before me in the vast expanse that is our network, teeming with breathless new news, truth dontcha know … given freely to those free ones who embrace freely their freedom, free from the fettering of the nonfree liberal liberals eliting themselves on the people …” Think Progress » O’Reilly excited that Palin will be able to use Fox News to help her political career.
  • The children were encouraged to unfetter their imaginations and let them soar, for it was more important to participate in the competition, rather than win the top prizes.
  • One should give up anger; one should abandon pride; one should overcome all fetters. I'll never befall him who clings not to mind and body and is passionless.
  • So much for the corporation's original justification that it could take risks unfettered by commercial pressures to attract new audiences.
  • There might be times when the tactics infringe individual freedoms such as the freedom to travel without fetter or freedoms of speech.
  • Capitalist property, private property in the means of production, the profit system itself, had become a "fetter" on the further development of the productive forces. Workers World news online
  • Is you it that that meet regardless what all free and unfettered butterfly?
  • Provided it is made without fetter of confidence and so on.
  • Though 'fettered' slave be none, her floors and soil HUMANITY
  • Anyone who says that the industry is 'fettered' by too much regulation and government interference, needs a swift kick in the ass! Archive 2009-07-01
  • Their ideal was the totally autonomous modern artist unfettered by ancestors, tradition, or nature.
  • owed unfettered as night down her back, and upon her head she wore a curious blue ornament, almost like a crown. THE GOLDEN FOOL: BOOK TWO OF THE TAWNY MAN
  • Now, for better or worse, the internet provides an unfettered outlet for twisted imaginations everywhere.
  • A contract which unlawfully fetters the discretion of a purchaser is ultra vires and invalid.
  • I wanted to drift like an unfettered balloon into the future.
  • The prisoner was kept in fetters.
  • A clog or fetter on the equity of redemption is void.
  • Those who have pushed for copyright maximization over the past decade or so have been able to do so unfettered by inconveniences like public deliberation or even serious attention.
  • No man loves his fetters, be they made of gold. 
  • Christian faith may teach us, that the state of the soul is vastly more important than the disposal made of the material form, and that he who has Christian faith will think only of the soul of his departed friend; that, in his view, the body will be only the deserted cell, the cast-off fetter, the forgotten aurelia of the released, the exultant spirit. The blessed dead waiting for us : a sermon preached in St. James' Church, Marietta, Georgia, on the Festival of All Saints, November 1st, 1863,
  • In a rosery of Fetter lane of Gerard, herbalist, he walks, greyedauburn. Ulysses
  • Discipline was maintained by a free application of whips, fetters, stocks, manacles, chains and the kongo, an iron collar with a long beam.
  • The plaintiff has an unfettered choice whether to pursue the action and serve the proceedings or not, being in breach of no rule or obligation if he chooses to let the writ expire unserved.
  • The cheney presidency in exile is giving us a taste of what unfettered political power has to do when they attempt to defend their promotion of uncontrolled big business and profit taking during an unnecessary war of choice. Think Progress » Rove: Obama ‘let a cowboy president…violate a fundamental principle of the Constitution.’
  • It is a bitterly harsh regime, which punishes poor pupils by placing them in heavy iron fetters.
  • This is a voice utterly unfettered and its luscious purity is a gorgeous gift to the speakers from which I listened transfixed by the variety and high standard of the music!
  • Yet it seems that criminal activity has continued unfettered and undetected for years. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was a Caliban, a monstrous phantom, fettered to him for untold ages, the penalty of some forgotten crime. In a Far Country
  • Here, huddled together in confused, hopeless misery and ruin, lie, fettered and prostrate, even priest as well as potentate, undistinguishable victims of crude, unblenching violence, with its climax of nefarious sacrilege. West Indian Fables by James Anthony Froude Explained by J. J. Thomas
  • How far can the government fetter its own future freedom of executive action by entering into a contract?
  • That would be a tragedy for Parliament and the people who place their trust in us, who see us as their last protection from the unfettered power of an untrammelled executive, when we have no written constitution.
  • We protect their anonymity to allow them unfettered access to the rich. Times, Sunday Times
  • Those were the days when the public, including cyclists, were allowed unfettered access to the street. Times, Sunday Times
  • Far from creating "embargoes" on the exchange of cultural property, as has been claimed by groups having an interest in maintaining the unfettered "anything goes" atmosphere of the art trade, the CCPIA is helping to make long needed distinctions between the legal, documented trade and that fueled by illicit and clandestine sources. UNESCO Convention Under Fire
  • Through the solid floor of the abode, the chill of winter seeped in, fettered little by the meagre warmth provided by the fire.
  • Her joy and amazement are particularly well suited to such an unfettered process.
  • Mr Francis argued that it does because it fetters one of the important rights inherent in ownership, that of freedom of alienation.
  • Some whose natural endowments would, under less unpropitious circumstances, qualify them to reach the summit of fame, are fettered by want of patronage and pecuniary distress, while others are cramped in their efforts by a complexional sensibility which they cannot overcome, and checked in enterprise by diffidence and timidity, the natural offspring of a refined and delicate structure. The Mirror of Taste, and Dramatic Censor, Vol. I, No. 5, May 1810
  • Chenault expects to sacrifice some of his margins to grasp the opportunity presented by unfettered competition.
  • He does exceptionally good figure work (full figured?) with a perfectly spartan but juicy brushwork and fairly unfettered backgrounds ... everything I do NOT do ... hmmm .. MIND MELD: Recent SF/F/H Book Covers That Blow Us Away
  • Is you it that that meet regardless what all free and unfettered butterfly?
  • Virtually no legal fetters exist to curb the resort to force; international legal standards afford only minimal protection.
  • It is healing and soothing to hold it, and it unfetters me from the energy of old ties.
  • Wise people do not call that a strong fetter which is made of iron, wood, or hemp; far stronger is the care for precious stones and rings, for sons and a wife. The Dhammapada
  • In writing poetry, one is unfettered by the normal rules of sentence structure.
  • It is a de facto fetter on the Minister's freedom to formulate policy in Government and the electorate's right to vote for parties espousing particular policies.
  • There is always a close connection between Varuna and Yama, and perhaps it is owing to this that parallel to 'Varuna's fetters' is found also 'Yama's fetter,' i.e., death (x. The Religions of India Handbooks on the History of Religions, Volume 1, Edited by Morris Jastrow
  • Because, in my opinion, nescient arm-chair security analysts with an axe to grind sure as hell shouldn't be able to declassify thousands of government documents and unfetter them into cyberspace. Michael Hughes: WikiStan: Do We Want Julian Assange on That Wall?
  • Aviation officials are hoping that the episode will persuade governments to help or at least unfetter their battered sector. Burning Issues
  • Unfettered by the bounds of reality, my imagination flourished.
  • No man loves his fetters, be they made of gold. 
  • The manner in which the saga has been dealt with in France, by the media and also by political figures, really shines a light on what we already knew was there: unfettered sexism, said de Haas, one of several feminists to find her voice just as France's reaction to the Affaire DSK looked like settling into lachrymose tributes to an alleged attacker and scorn for an alleged victim. How Dominique Strauss-Kahn's arrest awoke a dormant anger in the heart of France's women
  • Even today only the rarest company can claim unfettered independence.
  • Let loose for his first full 90 minutes this week, in a reserve match against Montrose, he says he was refusing to be fettered by any constraints.
  • Inmates can also move around freely, without fetters or handcuffs, and families can visit twice a week.
  • `The poaching of the beast makes it all the tastier ," Fetters had always remarked. CORMORANT
  • The slightest breach of a commitment to free and unfettered inspections - any place, any time - should be met by force.
  • He soon leaves for a tour of the Continent, with no specific destination, since genius despises fetters.
  • Multiple vocals, searing wah-wah, unfettered drums; it sounded like four bands bleeding together in an apartment fire, and it was fiercely exciting.
  • He also placed great emphasis on effective and unfettered communication.
  • Her roller coaster life gave her that, at least - unfettered joy. MOON PASSAGE
  • (notwithstanding their place of congress was a small coalshed in Fetter Lane) that she was nearly related to a man of fortune, but was injuriously kept by him out of large possessions. Life Of Johnson
  • If he experiences a pleasant feeling, he feels it as one unfettered by it.
  • The official excuse is that it will make the national economy more competitive, and therefore overcoming its 'rentier' history; the sort of foolish assertion that could only be accompanied by an unfettered capitalist agenda. Indymedia Ireland
  • The business which he had built up so zestfully in the autumn had enfettered him, and was shaping his leisure moments like an inexorable machine, and the realization of it gave him moodily thoughtful moments during the remainder of the week. A Son of the City A Story of Boy Life
  • If you ask me to fight under the old rules, son of Hellscream, then know that you have done nothing but unfetter my hands. The Shattering
  • `Migra," and sent back to their country in fetters after being booked as criminals. THREE KINDS OF KISSING - SCOTTISH SHORT STORIES
  • No man loves his fetters, be they made of gold. 
  • Whereas wrong desires restrict and fetter, right desires enhance and liberate.
  • And they… put out the eyes of Zedekiah, and bound him with fetters of bronze, and carried him to Babylon.
  • One should give up anger; one should abandon pride; one should overcome all fetters. I'll never befall him who clings not to mind and body and is passionless.
  • Slesser numbered himself among the last generation to be unfettered by political correctness.
  • Be sure that news reporters and your attorneys have unfettered access to these training sessions, including preparatory meetings.
  • Unlike in occupied Germany, they were unfettered by any need to accommodate the concerns of other Allies or public opinion at home (which would surely have supported hanging the Emperor).
  • In fact the Academy did, in 1890, enter into an agreement to "give, grant, assign, transfer, convey, and make over" to the State its collection of antiquities; but the agreement also specified that the "charge and custody of the said collection… shall remain with the said Royal Irish Academy, subject to such regulations and directions as may from time to time be prescribed by the [State] … but so as to leave the Royal Academy as unfettered in the charge and management of the Museum [collection] as circumstances will allow. 'Treasures of Early Irish Art': An Exchange
  • For example, I do not think even Bryan would agree to allow unfettered immigration of men in uniform from a country with which we are at war. Rosen and Responsibility, Bryan Caplan | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • No man loves his fetters, be they made of gold. 
  • So we believed him and he ceased not to cozen us till he cast us into jail and fettered us and tortured us with exceeding sore torments; and we are strangers in the land and have no helper save Almighty Allah and our lord the The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • The new strategy marks a potentially realistic middle ground between competing legislative visions for how to control or unfetter the chaotic world of digital media and distribution.
  • He was one, I confess, that I felt a mite sorry for, when the fettering was done, and the band had struck up "The Rogues March", and they shuffled off, dragging their irons as they were herded away to the New Jail beyond the Grand Trunk Road. Fiancée
  • Both in the English and in the French Revolutions the property question presented itself in such wise that it seemed to be imperative to enforce free competition and to effect the abolition of all feudal property relations, such as manorial rights, guilds, monopolies, which had been transformed into fetters upon the industry which was developing between the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries. Selected Essays
  • Future work will not be fettered by previous constraints.
  • All three, and particu - larly Bruno, extend Ficino's anthropocentrism into cosmic dimensions, as they unfold a universe to be explored and understood through the unfettered inter - rogation of nature rather than by a perusal of tradi - tional authors — an ideal consecrated by Bruno's martyrdom. PLATONISM IN THE RENAISSANCE
  • The benign prerogative of mercy reposed cannot be fettered by any legislative restrictions.
  • Merely opening up the floorplate and providing unfettered opportunities to communicate, however, actually placed too much focus on interaction.
  • The idea of voluntarism - of unfettered individual action - which guides so much of market and social behavior also permeates the culture of love.
  • An extraordinary attack on a candidate purely because of youth from a party advocating voting, candidacy, porn acting, freeform yobbery and unfettered drinking for 16 year olds. Archive 2007-04-22
  • And if the argument-ender is dropped and it's recognized that questions of design and designers can't be ruled on in either direction by science, it's a step backwards for a side that used to enjoy relatively unfettered BS rights. Bunny and a Book
  • The direct link between economic freedom and unfettered self-expression is the unarticulated subtext of the many biographies of stars from this era.
  • The happy elephant the sailing ship which fetters, we cannot find the opposite shore.
  • Therefore we can not make the apriori assertion that private ownership and unfettered operation is always more efficient.
  • But our economy and our way of life both depend on comparatively unfettered road transport.
  • In this match, released of the fetters of responsibility, he has been a man reborn and his spirit - depressed for so long - has soared,
  • More urgently, we want to be free to trade unfettered with the rest of the world. The Sun
  • Women throughout the developed world, she adds, are in revolt ‘against a domestic role they believe fetters their personal freedom’.

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