confine

পুরা
definition
verb
he does not confine his message to politics
keep or restrict someone or something within certain limits of (space, scope, quantity, or time).
noun
they were cramped within the confines of a little cabin
the borders or boundaries of a place, especially with regard to their restricting freedom of movement.
translation of 'confine'
কারারুদ্ধ করা,
সীমাবদ্ধ করে রাখা,
সীমানা,
সংকীর্ণ স্থানে আবদ্ধ রাখা
verb
কয়েদ করা,
আটক করা,
আটকান,
কারারূদ্ধ করা,
বদ্ধ করা,
পুরা,
বন্ধন করা
noun
ধার,
সীমা,
সর্বাধিক সীমা
example
I must 'confine' my writing to the inside, enclose it within a perimeter, which forms a circular line, an orbit around the text.
If anything, increasingly independent boards of directors are overseeing the succession process and are less likely to 'confine' their search to the best candidate within the company.
he does not 'confine' his message to high politics
Considering these will strengthen the proposal by grounding it in the dynamic of an ongoing reality; failure to do so will 'confine' its discussion to the narrow scope of the academy.
The psychologist warned that it would be harmful to 'confine' him in the punitive ‘management unit’ or among men in the Red 1 compound designed for ‘long-term behaviour management’.
In subsequent years, Givon would 'confine' her efforts to the main gallery spaces in the Monument.
he does not 'confine' his message to politics
The boss has a daughter who 'is confined to' a wheelchair by a psychosomatic illness.
The buildings are to be located within the 'confines' of the existing Waste Water Treatment Works.
A highly infectious disease, it passes easily from sheep to sheep, particularly when 'they are confined in' a small space, during housing, periods of supplementary feeding or even in handling yards.
The director creatively allows the audience to look beyond the 'confines' of the theatre space.
In particular, it said, the terms were too restrictive in 'confining' the examination to just three hospitals and to deceased children under 12 years who were born alive.
Anything said or done within the 'confines' of the European team room should, in my opinion, remain private.
Where the damage has been done is internally, within the 'confines' of Northern Ireland.
He was hospitalised, endured numerous operations, 'was confined to' a wheelchair for many months and kept out of school for a year.
It seems that this caring does not extend outside the 'confines' of our own country, our island, our citadel.
This means finding a building within the 'confines' of the town boundary but not too close to the centre of the town.
He 'is confined to' a wheelchair and he hopes his own story will help change the minds of politicians who are opposed to lifting bans on therapeutic cloning.
Their anatomy was half-human, half-animal, and 'they were confined in' a low-ceilinged, windowless and oddly proportioned space.
At present, six million pregnant sows in the EU 'are confined in' stalls, including many in the Republic of Ireland.
When she was diagnosed with MS at the age of 17, the Failsworth mother-of-two 'was confined to' a wheelchair.
Above that, a balcony, which stretched to the 'confines' of the building, was also filled with books.
Food, in the 'confines' of jail, takes on a more basic and urgent quality than it does outside.
For six months 'she was confined in' the Jewish ghetto, then she was transferred to Dachau, near Munich.
The youngster, who 'is confined to' a wheelchair, is unable to breathe or swallow unaided and the only parts unaffected are her brain, heart, eyes and ears.
Instead of yelling at me, he threw me over his shoulder, strode down the main deck, and tossed me in the room 'I was confined in' before.
He 'was confined to' a wheelchair and told that he would never walk again.
I protested, trying to make my way out of the 'confines' of the restricting hospital sheets.
The patient, named only as Mrs H, 'was confined to' a wheelchair and never left the home.
This sort of detail should never leave the 'confines' of the hospital.
Credits: Google Translate