Restricted in a sentence as an adjective

Good thing no MIT student has ever snuck into a restricted area before.

I'm not sure if this matters too much here, but I'm also not sure that it doesn't matter.\n 7. The ciphertext seems to be restricted to messages of exactly 128 bits.

This isn't restricted to open source project leaders, or even open source developers.

It is a very strong argument for a new kind of walled garden: the nationally restricted Internet.

My parents could barely even travel out of South Africa as flying over/travelling other African countries were restricted.

Thus, with restricted stock, you are subject to tax at ordinary income rates on the difference between what you paid for it and what its value is at each vesting point.

It's true that the private-education market is currently effectively restricted to wealthier families, but it's still quite large.

The internet in particular has been a huge liberating force and so young people especially have come to take it for granted that they can freely make all sorts of choices without having to feel burdened or restricted by the heavy hand of the law.

I don't agree that he should be in jail, but the "restricted patterns of 1s and 0s" bit is like saying that murdering someone with a gun is just facilitating the journey of a piece of refined earth that just happens to go through some watery carbon mass.

With such a time-based performance incentive, which is what is called "restricted stock", you own the stock up front and you pay no tax at the time of purchase in the normal case where the amount you pay for it equals its fair value on the date of the grant.

Restricted definitions

adjective

subject to restriction or subjected to restriction; "of restricted importance"

adjective

restricted in meaning; (as e.g. `man' in `a tall man')

See also: qualified

adjective

the lowest level of official classification for documents