Englishfor English speakers
restraint
Noun
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Restraint is the quality people show when they don't do something they shouldn't do.
You already ate too much cake. Now please show some restraint.
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A restraint is a strap or other thing that holds a person in place, like a seatbelt in a car or handcuffs that the police use to hold someone.
A baby needs the right kind of restraint to ride safely in a car.
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A restraint is something that stops people from doing something.
A legal restraint prevents him from going to meet his ex-girlfriend.
jacket
Noun
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A jacket is a piece of clothing with long sleeves that you wear over a shirt. A jacket is not as long as a coat.
He took his phone from the pocket of his jacket.
He pulled on his pants, grabbed his leather jacket, and ran out the door.
The girl wore a wool jacket that was so short you could almost see her stomach.
They wore red shirts, or jackets from the English Army.
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A jacket is a covering on something such as a book or a record.
Most Oz books don't have their original dust jackets because the books were so well loved.
He slipped the record carefully from the jacket.
A wire to go underground should have a jacket that will not allow water to enter.
We had a meal of potatoes boiled in their jackets, fish, black bread and butter, and pickled beets.
jacket
Verb
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If you jacket something, you put a jacket on it.
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If mathx/math jackets mathy/math, mathx/math covers mathy/math.