English to Telugu Dictionary stricture

stricture

నింద
definition
noun
religious strictures on everyday life
a restriction on a person or activity.
his strictures on their lack of civic virtue
a sternly critical or censorious remark or instruction.
translation of 'stricture'
ఆక్షేపణ,
నింద
example
a colonic 'stricture'
At the time of referral, she was awaiting surgery for a colonic 'stricture' resulting from a recurrence of carcinoma of the colon.
jaundice caused by bile duct 'stricture'
However, I am also convinced that my 'stricture' about the hermeneutic circle is and must be self-referential.
jaundice caused by bile duct 'stricture'
a colonic 'stricture'
A clear distinction between the dysphagia of an inflammatory 'stricture' and that of carcinoma is impossible on clinical grounds alone.
Once again, my criticism of U.S. hegemony had to be tempered by a 'stricture' on Japan's own insular nationalism.
All patients should be evaluated for esophageal rings and 'strictures' after the foreign body is removed.
The statute essentially applies the 'strictures' imposed by section 246 to deals involving foreign equities.
You are released from restrictions and 'strictures' that may have been binding for some time.
Teachers often complain that it imposes too many 'strictures' on them that force them to teach too much too fast.
Above these there is a vocal line so free and continuous that the 'strictures' imposed by the repetition of the bass are scarcely felt.
Significantly, ministers are to impose new 'strictures' on police and social workers.
Critics of both films offered 'strictures' that suggest more than an awareness of this axiom.
His past history was significant for chronic alcoholic pancreatitis with pancreatic duct 'strictures' and stones which had been treated with dilation and stone extraction 4 years ago.
The same intellectual 'strictures' confined Hunter's achievements.
Composers such as Webern leapt on the concept and ran with it, going so far as to impose these same 'strictures' on all aspects of music including rhythm.
Few local governors were Dissenters; but many were sympathetic to them and reluctant to impose the full 'strictures' of the vindictive laws which Parliament went on to pass against their religious assemblies.
These tracts heed the critical 'strictures' against both love and wit.
These writers indicate a world where mature-age students are keenly looking for new learning and new social interactions after having participated in 'strictured' career lives.
But the most frightening thing about the entire affair is that public figures like congressmen inserted themselves into the case in order to uphold religious 'strictures' .
Both sides in this political ‘debate’ between conservatism and liberalism stress personal freedom for themselves while piously imposing 'strictures' on others.
By 1750 writers had begun to question the religious 'strictures' laid down by men such as Samuel Moody.
There is a powerful and self-regulating national interest in observing the 'strictures' of the Convention, because prisoners are taken by both sides of any conflict.
A colonic patch was mobilized and placed into the 'strictured' area.
Why impose such 'strictures' on the whole of the market?
On stem-cell research, he stated that the 'strictures' he imposed still gave scientists more than sixty usable lines of such cells, when they had only one.
Those same strong students (one hopes) will ultimately supercede the 'strictures' imposed in the educational studio, but at what cost?
Such 'strictures' may seem ironic coming from a historian whom some critics have seen as letting the landlords off lightly when it came to the abuse of their social and economic power.
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