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"narrowness" Definitions
  1. the fact of measuring a short distance from one side to the other, especially in relation to length
  2. the fact of only just being achieved or avoided
  3. the fact of ignoring important issues or the opinions of other people
  4. the fact of being limited in variety or numbers
"narrowness" Synonyms
constriction tightness confinement restriction fineness slightness slenderness slimness thinness skinniness shallowness flatness boniness scrawniness leanness gauntness emaciation tenuity lankiness incompactness angularity trimness scragginess sharpness bigotry prejudice bias intolerance insularity discrimination partisanship dogmatism narrow-mindedness sectarianism partiality fanaticism xenophobia jingoism racism racialism chauvinism illiberality small-mindedness parochialism provincialism localism closed-mindedness limitedness restrictedness pettiness inflexibility short-sightedness myopia puritanism prudishness austerity moralism severity asceticism nice-nellyism piety prudery rigidity strictness zeal piousness rigorism primness priggishness stuffiness squeamishness prissiness prescriptiveness authoritarianism unbendingness prescriptivity oversensitivity politeness shockability strait-lacedness clannishness cliquishness exclusivity exclusiveness selectness unfriendliness specialism specialisation(UK) specialization(US) concentration detail expert knowledge in-depth study narrowing down specialty(US) speciality(UK) knowledge specialized knowledge expertise specialized skill core competency specialized technique special study gaining in-depth knowledge focusing in gaining expertise smallness diminutiveness littleness puniness atomity brevity compactness dinkiness infinitesimalness minuteness petiteness scantiness shortness smallishness tininess small size squatness dumpiness precision accuracy exactness closeness exactitude meticulousness preciseness correctness scrupulousness thoroughness faithfulness correspondence vigorousness nicety accurateness carefulness rigor(US) veracity rigour(UK) More

142 Sentences With "narrowness"

How to use narrowness in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "narrowness" and check conjugation/comparative form for "narrowness". Mastering all the usages of "narrowness" from sentence examples published by news publications.

That is a remarkable figure considering the narrowness of Clinton's defeat.
The family's influence reflects the narrowness of the country's political class.
He said the narrowness of the economy is still worrying him.
Or is it a life marked by isolation, narrowness, beneath our potential?
The narrowness of Britain's vote -- 52% to 48% -- dictates a moderate course.
The narrowness of the victory points to an extremely close final vote.
And from the narrowness of its vision that DFS Lab derives its effectiveness.
"We emphasize again the narrowness of the issue before us," the decision read.
The narrowness of its perspective and its relatively brief 82-minute length disappoint.
That is because of the narrowness of Sanders's winning demographics, as demonstrated in Nevada.
Its narrowness created a cramped interior, with corridor-like galleries inhospitable to art viewing.
The whole game, however, is in the breadth, narrowness or exclusivity of rules and precedent.
Some Trump allies took a measure of comfort from the apparent narrowness of Weisselberg's agreement.
The narrowness of Sanders' message is efficient, while Clinton's message so far is muddled and defensive.
But even as I call that ruling infamous, I recognize the narrowness of the historical verdict.
Withholding or rescinding ceremonial honors is petty and shows a narrowness of spirit and of mind.
The breadth of the court's majority was a testament to the narrowness of the decision's reasoning.
Rather, they chafed at the narrowness of the message when candidates address black and Latino voters.
Despite their narrowness, our floors will probably become open-plan—few clients want cellular offices these days.
For all of his outward show of bravado, the narrowness of the victory may have unsettled Erdoğan.
Louise Melling, deputy legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union, emphasized the narrowness of the opinion.
I missed the warmth of it—the narrowness of the staircase, the slant of the walls, Christmas.
Given the narrowness of the result and the idiosyncratic nature of Clinton's email troubles, they may be right.
The narrowness of the charges against Weinstein adds to the stakes of the trial for the #MeToo movement.
Republicans would be wise to use the narrowness of their majority to curb the incoming president's worst instincts.
Mark had a trim, minnowish narrowness that suggested he moved swiftly, easily, and silvery through the channels of business.
But in following along with these objectives, you will always come face-to-face with the narrowness of Yonder.
It's been many decades now since historians began to dismantle "Great Man" theories of history, emphasizing their narrowness and artificiality.
And yes, the narrowness of that result means that there is at least the possibility he could win it again.
Perhaps reflecting the narrowness of his victory, Kennedy appointed several nonpartisan or Republican figures to important positions in his administration.
The block's narrowness yielded the lean, twisting body (as opposed to an overmuscled superman), with its huge head and hands.
But that narrowness, in turn, reveals a piece like "Hers and His" as an almost unlimited arena of creative decisions.
An administrator posted the new rules earlier today, saying that the "narrowness" of the earlier policy had reduced its effectiveness.
He jumped beautifully, assessing the height of the barrier and the narrowness of the ledge that was to receive him.
Their narrowness of vision, of a world where only their world view could be tolerated, left no room for common understanding.
Its narrowness seemed a direct nod at those who say Warren and Sanders' plans suffer from being overly broad and unrealistic.
Another kitchen remodel she worked on had several issues — narrowness, poor lighting, lack of counter space, and a non-functional pantry.
The reinsurer's investment profile is attributable to the narrowness of the local investment market and strict regulation of the investment policy.
The investment profile is attributable to the narrowness of the local investment market and strict regulation of the insurer's investment policy.
Knowing or learning a foreign language is to educate to lead out- to lead out of confinement and narrowness and darkness.
In a related group of photographs, from 1972–663, she explores the narrowness in behavior granted to those assigned the label female.
Instead, it was the narrowness of Bishop's victory that was notable, given that the district has been in Republican hands for decades.
His outsiders, we come to understand, maintained their identities and integrity despite, or maybe because of the narrowness of the dominant culture.
Given the narrowness of his victory, especially in the industrial belt, the question arises as to how durable is this new majority.
The narrowness of the state only increases its vulnerability: it's the only state that is vulnerable on both sides, east and west.
"While Russia is responsible for the demise of the treaty," Pompeo added, he also appeared to criticize the narrowness of the INF.
I look back at the first Girlschool, and while I stand by all those artists, I'm embarrassed about my narrowness of view.
What united these unintentional pioneers was the wish to see punk grow beyond its narrowness and self-negation into something more universal.
Europeans and other world powers believe that it was only the narrowness of the original deal that secured Iranian co-operation in 2015.
But I also hope that the fertility industry will realize the narrowness of the lens that it's using to talk about this technology.
It mirrors the narrowness of established taste, the fickleness of the art market and the friendships forged among artists that help them survive.
By retreating to neat homogeneous monocultures, most separatists will end up doing what all self-segregationists do, fostering narrowness, prejudice and moral arrogance.
And when politicians co-opt the pulpit, they pervert Scripture's prophetic message, delimiting faith's concerns to the narrowness of their partisan political agenda.
And in all three cases, it has ignored the narrowness of the majority and has argued it has a mandate for radical policy change.
This narrowness feeds through to policy advice, which too often applies established models to current circumstances, rather than considering fundamental reinterpretions of the issues.
As far reaching as the effects of this bill would be on Americans' privacy and safety, its jurisdictional narrowness is yet another catastrophic flaw.
Those who worry about the narrowness of the market breadth usually link this tech strength to a sign of weakness in the broader market.
And the narrowness of Erdoğan's victory – along with improprieties along the way – mean that Turkey's near future is likely to be very stormy indeed.
This show's meticulous arguments about shape, color, medium and scale rebuke the narrowness — and, in some cases, the racism — of many western art museums.
In the summer of 2001, Hikmat was fourteen years old, and he and his friends chafed at the narrowness of life under the Taliban.
It is hard not to notice the predominance of male voices among the interview subjects, and the narrowness of the film's discussion of domestic violence.
Trippi also saw a danger for the party, in that virtually any explanation for why Clinton lost is plausible, given the narrowness of the margin.
Although this narrowness of approach has started to loosen under the foundation's new director, Jessica Morgan, it is still a place for the highly informed.
The Col de Traversette was one of many paths considered, but its narrowness and height -- it's close to 10,000 feet above sea level -- made it daunting.
To put it another way, Katherine's existence registers as a protest against the narrowness of American show business precisely because she's such a vivid, complicated, believable person.
"That's an orgasmic experience of its own," he says, "when you situate your frailty as a human being, and the narrowness of your concerns, in the cosmos."
The narrowness doesn't end there: Not only is after-the-fact gun-control a panacea of questionable effectiveness, it ignores the political history of guns in America.
Readers will recognize Dyson's practiced flair for language and metaphor as he makes an important and layered argument about American political culture and the narrowness of presidential speech.
English nationalism, by contrast, has a tinge of narrowness about it that excludes not only the Welsh, Scottish and Northern Irish, but also English people from ethnic minorities.
The narrowness of Cole's hyperintellectualized point of view, which is naïve in its own right, misses much of the potential and magic power of human communion through art.
But soon detractors began to complain that the structure was already showing signs of deterioration and that the narrowness of the path made cyclists easy prey for muggers.
Analysts saw potential losers and pitfalls all around, however, given the narrowness of the separatist victory and the political gulf it indicated in both Catalonia and the country.
Each summer, the Bard Music Festival in Annandale-on-Hudson, N.Y., finds a new way of broadening classical music's past beyond the narrowness of its typical performance canon.
But its narrowness suggests that without the votes of, say, Poland's right-populist Law and Justice (PiS) MEPs or those of Hungary's authoritarian Fidesz, she would not have won.
Even though the narrowness of her victory in Iowa probably induced some 2008 flashbacks, the win was an important coup for the former secretary of state, wrote Alex Shephard.
He wanted to show the same people in the very conflict without their props or with the props rearranged in a way that revealed the narrowness of conventional reporting.
The smaller lobby stage was a fine fit for her somewhat warm, somewhat muted suites, the narrowness of the hall mirroring the close confines of the Airliner's upstairs stage.
I fear that it will encourage more discrimination on "religious" grounds by those who are not constitutional lawyers, who do not understand the narrowness of the Supreme Court's ruling.
And the evening, at its best, was both a demonstration of, and an argument for, the value of pluralism, for expansive humanism as an antidote to narrowness and intolerance.
This is not the only passage in which the narrowness of the novel's focus (solely on this one friendship) underserves the importance of the events that are its backdrop.
She describes Trump's victory as a mandate — never mind its narrowness or all that Russian nefariousness — and dismisses his critics by citing their inability to see that heady triumph coming.
For many years, the company's worst logistical hurdle was the narrowness of the road (which has since been widened), bordered by tall oak trees, that led to the main highway.
Nevertheless, the narrowness of this decision can probably be chalked up to Justice Anthony Kennedy — a relatively moderate conservative who is sympathetic to both religious liberty plaintiffs and gay rights.
Whatever my quibbles about the overtidy construction of "Plot Points" and the narrowness of its immediate concerns, this news reminded me of why a play like this can be so important.
But even before the six-day plunge, the narrowness of the quarter's advance hinted that the market was on shakier ground than the peak reached in the period might have suggested.
The new generation of residential towers, rising in their vertiginous narrowness and affordable to only the elect, are the symbols of our time: the wealthy giving the finger to the city.
Florida is in the midst of an automatic machine recount that was triggered by the narrowness of the margins for both Scott (in the Senate race) and DeSantis (in the governor's race).
Horror derives as much from the narrowness of his characters' minds as the Cronenbergian mortifications of their flesh, creating an all-too-plausible nightmare of media's ability to turn brother against brother.
However, the narrowness of the streets will limit the militants' ability to attack advancing troops with suicide car bombs, one of the group's most effective weapons, along with mortar and sniper fire.
Many Vermonters who take satisfaction in Mr. Sanders's progressive message may also wonder whether his single-minded focus on economic inequality and his relative narrowness of experience would make him a good president.
"I'm still concerned that growth is still not broadbased," said Nomura economist Brian Tan, adding that the narrowness of the growth "will not sustain" the stellar GDP numbers seen in the third quarter.
As you read through the new collection, however, you realize that what seems at first like narrowness, or mere repetition, is in fact intellectual self-consistency, dogged allegiance to the highest artistic ideals.
I'm not talking about a gym sneaker, and there's a large difference with multicolors and just the wideness versus the narrowness of a everyday sneaker versus something that you would wear that's dressier.
And while the narrowness of the ban has already raised questions about its likely effectiveness, another perhaps more pressing problem has come to the fore: Politicians get a particular exception to the rule.
Or was the court expressing something that the narrowness of the cases could not address head-on—namely, that sexuality and gender are inextricable, that this was a fight over bodies and power?
We were initially circumspect about Walker's chances for a third term given the overall political climate this year, the narrowness of President Trump 's victory in Wisconsin and the intensity of Democratic opposition to him.
"A remarkable aspect of Ben's dominance of his professional field was that he achieved it without the narrowness of mental activity that concentrates all efforts on a single end," Buffett says in Graham's remembrance letter.
JOHN HAVARDLondon The Economist and most other serious publications take it as read that the Leave campaign was run almost exclusively on lies but the result must be respected despite the narrowness of the majority.
Criticisms of the OECD include perceived narrowness of its membership; it excludes major market players like China, and critics point to an overarching like-mindedness of its members as hindering more effective outreach and engagement.
At issue is the narrowness of the proposed law, which restricts medically-assisted death to mentally-sound adults over 18 who have a "serious and incurable illness, disease or disability" and voluntarily consent to die.
There is a certain feeling of narrowness as well in Santiago, Chile's densely populated capital city: the car lanes are narrow, as are the sidewalks, the parking spaces, the waiting rooms, the aisles in the pharmacy.
That disparity — between his potential to push through an agenda for deep change because of his majority and the narrowness of his true popular support — could eventually spell trouble for a young and relatively untested president.
Having been raised in this way and, as an adult, living in Victorian England, what he hated most was narrowness, conformity, the crushing of individuals under the weight of peer pressure, government power or public opinion.
"The narrowness of the numbers and the gamesmanship that brought us to this point wouldn't strike me with any great confidence that this government will last until 2018," said Gary Murphy, politics professor at Dublin City University.
" Syrian President Bashar al-Assad said the United States had carried out an "unjust and unabashed assault" against Syria which "shows nothing but short-sightedness, a narrowness of vision and a blindness to political and military realities.
But the narrowness of his victory could have the opposite effect: adding to volatility in a country that has lately survived an attempted coup, attacks by Islamists, a Kurdish insurgency, civil unrest and war across its Syrian border.
Based on the goal of providing more services, better services and easier access to services, this multi-agency initiative set out to correct the narrowness with which mental health and addiction treatment services were being promoted and delivered.
And despite the all-media embrace, there is often the sense that instead of a genuine expansion, one form of narrowness built on French Cubism has been replaced by another that is too exclusively involved with Conceptual Art.
In the impeachment trial, senators will vote on whether to ratify the propriety of Mr. Trump's behavior — and Republican senators will no doubt seek refuge in the narrowness of the articles and the constitutional technicalities of executive power.
But the narrowness of the window of time in which Miranda was able to be unproblematically aspirational speaks to how narrow we keep the parameters of acceptable fantasy roles for women, and how strictly we police their boundaries.
The answer is that such exclusive and clubbish nomination practices ensure that the Court will suffer a peculiar kind of intellectual insularity, reflecting the deep biases built into Ivy League legal education and the narrowness of the justices' experiences.
Eilis Lacey (Saoirse Ronan), an Irish lass escaping the narrowness of her hometown in the 103s, immigrates to the titular borough and finds loneliness, romance and a new identity in this best-picture Oscar nominee, directed by John Crowley.
Eilis Lacey (Saoirse Ronan), an Irish lass escaping the narrowness of her hometown in the 1950s, immigrates to the titular borough and finds loneliness, romance and a new identity in this best-picture Oscar nominee, directed by John Crowley.
While Moore might have lost regardless, the relative narrowness of his defeat -- 22,000 votes or so -- suggests that an attempt to come to terms with the accusations in some sort of professional campaign manner might have made a difference.
Eilis Lacey (Saoirse Ronan), an Irish lass escaping the narrowness of her hometown in the 1950s, immigrates to the titular borough and finds loneliness, romance and a new identity in this best-picture Oscar nominee directed by John Crowley.
This is the bitter paradox regarding the grousing about immigrant fiction: that a genre with such a wide sweep, with such a vantage point on the contingencies of human and cultural behavior, can be derided for, of all things, narrowness.
A sonata is usually allegro, so for all the density of detail there's a cracking sense of pace, and the themes themselves are as haunting and sharply contrasted as they should be — love and lovelessness, heroism and banality, vision and narrowness.
Instead of mining the past, think about what it is you like about Hedi's work and silhouette — the narrowness of the back, shoulders and legs; the just-this-side-of-appropriate edge — and make those the criteria for discovering someone new.
Kati Piri, a Dutch legislator who is the European Parliament's rapporteur on Turkey, pointed to the narrowness of Mr. Erdogan's victory, noting that millions of Turks had voted against his constitutional changes and that Europe should not forsake those people.
Letters To the Editor: Re "The Real Threat to Election Integrity" (editorial, July 9): As one of the small cadre of Cassandras who have long been warning about this vulnerability, I must question the narrowness of your view of potential meddlers.
As people invested in nuance and complexity, we owe it to ourselves and the creators of the work to educate ourselves in the traditions and legacies of the community so we can appreciate the work outside the narrowness of such framings.
The initial complaint that diesel was being taxed too highly — punishing rural workers dependent on cars — was soon joined by complaints about rising costs of living, tax breaks for the richest in society, the French constitution, and the narrowness of France's political class.
Even without all of the data about how divided we are as a country -- which predates Trump -- the President's numbers, especially in key swing states combined with the narrowness of his 2016 victory suggest that the 2020 election is likely to be close.
Given the narrowness of Trump's election victory, it is possible (or even likely) that had the Fed not made this mistake, the slightly faster economic growth in 2016 that would have resulted from lower rates would have pushed Hillary Clinton over the line.
Prince has attributed his eclecticism in part to the narrowness of local radio; with no R&B on at night, he tuned in KQRS and was shaped by Grand Funk Railroad and Joni Mitchell as well as Sly Stone and the Stylistics.
Part of what makes this dance idiom recognizable is a certain narrowness, and over the course of an hourlong show, as the same moves kept returning, I periodically found myself wondering if Mr. Harris and the dancers had run out of material.
"We're looking at a company that we think has a very sturdy and insightful strategy in terms of the narrowness of the focus on the technology and really looking at disrupting the industry in a way that consumers find compelling," he said.
He doesn't just seem frustrated by Sanders's theory of political revolution — he seems, at times, regretful about the high expectations he created for liberals in 2008, and the fury with which his campaign assailed Clinton for the narrowness of her political vision.
Something about the narrowness of the issue—the protesters' decision to highlight not just animal rights or animal agriculture but specifically the annual subsidies that flow to the dairy-milk industry—feels like performance-art commentary on the mosaic quality of the Democratic primary electorate.
Berkeley didn't escape the prejudices of his times; just as the illusion of the Hollywood mainstream was defined by the absence of the people and perspectives it excluded, his own conceptual depth and power of expression are inseparable from the narrowness of his sensibility. ♦
The narrowness of Trump's victory (100,000 votes across three states) makes this blame game particularly unproductive because all explanations—from the idea that Clinton lost due to political sabotage to the idea that Clinton lost because the Democratic Party isn't left-wing enough—have surface plausibility.
"We review demands for narrowness, legal sufficiency, duration, and scope, and consider all appropriate options before we comply, including seeking clarification or modification of the demand, or even challenging the demand in court," Yahoo general counsel Ron Bell wrote in a blog post accompanying the transparency report.
All I wanted was some rule-bending clerk who'd let me tell them about the little scar my son has over his right eyebrow from falling off his bike, the narrowness of his feet, the color of his eyes and hair including a likely long and mangy beard.
And Schumer, in particular, will have some real leverage—thanks to the Democrats' ability to filibuster some nominees and legislation in the Senate, the narrowness of the Republican majority in that chamber, and the pronounced willingness of Republican senators like Lindsay Graham and Rand Paul to buck Trump.
Anthony Eden (Jeremy Northam) waxes lyrical to the young men of Eton College about how his alma mater continues to be the "birthplace of Britain's leaders", that "narrowness at the top is not necessarily a bad thing" and that the education Eton provides has furnished those leaders with a certain "clarity".
Halo 2 pillaged sci-fi cinema in its cutscenes and designs to hide its narrowness, while Doom 3 used cheap pop-up scares and "no duct tape on Mars" (a reference to how there was no way to attach a flashlight to your weapon) to make the environment a constant threat.
The narrowness of the victory also reflected the big strides into the mainstream the far right has made not only in Austria, but in much of Europe — from neighboring Hungary and Poland, where it already holds sway, to France and Germany, where rightist movements are polling strongly before national elections next year.
Another paradox is that even though Monaco is the circuit where it is most difficult for drivers to pass one another, because of the narrowness of the track in the urban confines, there is almost always some kind of racing excitement, usually a result of an accident caused by a driver's error.
Despite this narrowness of vision, the book is a delightfully rich fruitcake and an old-fashioned pleasure to read; its plot is an intricate set of intersecting mechanisms and locks and keys, which, when they finally all fall into place, provide the reader with the gawping satisfaction of having been well and truly fooled.
This sense of aesthetic narrowness is compounded by his landmark Synecdoche (1991-2) — a grid of small monochromatic rectangles, each panel of which depicts the skin color of the sitter whose "portrait" Kim has painted — which is so evocative and art historically important that it tends to eclipse the rest of his work in the public imagination.
For those of us who have long been frustrated precisely by the smallness of those differences, the narrowness of the G.O.P. policy debate, it's a particularly staggering result: A party whose leading factions often seemed incapable of budging from 1980s-era dogma suddenly caved completely to a candidate who regards much of the conservative vision with indifference bordering on contempt.
And as a consequence of this narrowness of interest, it is possible to believe that getting the president of the United States, whether through impeachment, indictment, or just beating him in the 2020 race, will be a social and political panacea, that it will set aright most of what ails our society, and that we can return to a version of an already idealized Obama era, with a graceful grown-up reassuring us that cooler heads will inevitably prevail.

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