0 past simple and past participle of circumscribe --
1 to limit something: --
Moreover, when children enter the equation, the freedoms of adults become circumscribed too.
One-third were in fair health, which means that their daily routines were affected by ailments but their independence was insignificantly circumscribed.
Most works favour mid-range theorising, frequently policy oriented, on carefully circumscribed problems held in isolation from each other.
These more narrowly circumscribed educational, developmental, and psycholinguistic determinants are subordinated to politicalideological impositions at the risk of undermining basic democratic principles.
Without the rights and liberties associated with democratic governance, the kinds of demands associated with more open forms of government are circumscribed.
We divided each grid into contiguous 100-m2 areas circumscribed by the four trap stations at the corners.
And this secrecy which ' ' circumscribed their lives ' ' (25) extended to their own political histories.
Additionally, they aren't ready to comprehend being circumscribed or restricted.