Wiktionary
n. (plural of injunction English)
Usage examples of "injunctions".
By their own accounts, they just want to study texts, they do not want to take up the injunctions and the paradigms and do the real science.
The specific moral injunctions in these religions are thus often (and still) bound to surface structures that simply make little (if any) sense in today's world: don't eat pork, don't eat with your right hand, don't sleep on wool, don't allow women in the temple.
But to the extent that the contemplative endeavor discloses universal aspects of the Kosmos, then the deep structures of the contemplative traditions (but not their surface structures) would be expected to show cross-cultural similarities at the various levels of depth created/disclosed by the meditative injunctions and paradigms.
No ascesis, no yoga, no shiktantaza, no personal injunctions or transformations are required to get at the truthone simply opens one's eyes and sharpens one's monological gaze.
David Shayler and Annie Machon, 'Martin Ingrams', Liam Clarke, Nigel Wylde, Martin Bright, Tony Geraghty, Ed Moloney, Julie-Ann Davies and James Steen have all been subject to injunctions, police raids and threats of imprisonment.
They took expensive injunctions out against me in the UK, Switzerland, Germany, the USA and New Zealand, all in disregard for laws governing freedom of speech, guessing correctly that I did not have the funds to appeal through the courts.
Arnay-le-Duc, in spite of passports and legal injunctions, persists in retaining Mesdames.