0 an area surrounded by a fence for keeping horses or cattle in, especially in North America --
1 to move horses or cattle into a corral --
Police corralled most of the demonstrators in a small area near the station.
2 an area surrounded by a fence for keeping horses or cattle --
Will it be corralled by this?
I believe, rather, that it is because people are increasingly corralled into groups, federations and other corporate bodies so that they can take cover behind collective responsibility.
To achieve price stability, member states' monetary, fiscal and exchange rate policies are to be corralled and converged, despite the diversity of those member states' economies.
We should also remember that, while people are corralled in pens, waiting to cross the road, they are subject to the worst of diesel and petrol fumes.
Also, the whole area of criminal justice and policing is being moved out of the third pillar, where it was corralled precisely to protect its intergovernmental nature.
If we did this, industry would feel they were contributing to something and were not being corralled into doing something they did not want to do.
I am talking about male lambs that are able to stand up to the winter and stay on the hills for a year without being put into corrals and barns.
Where there really are these cowboys, they should be corralled.