If we deprive ourselves of the one, we relegate the other to indecisiveness and irrelevance.
Nobody has the right to deprive us Cubans on the island of what they enjoy quite naturally abroad.
He wants to deprive all his fellows of the right to act in order to reserve this privilege for himself alone.
Deprive us of emotional and physical contact (a hug and a smile can go a long way), and we will wither and die just as surely as if we were deprived of food.
The trees outside the windows deprive the house of light.
They wanted to deprive us of the unity that defines us as a people.
As you know, I have my own ration of sugar, and I must not deprive you of yours [3].
Originally, the love that she is your right, but love your is her right, but you want to exercise their rights in their own time to deprive others of the freedom to exercise their rights.
Nobody entitle to deprive of other's right to survival.
The findings, say researchers, should give smokers reassurance that quitting will not deprive them of a valuable stress reliever.
In it Ian Craig, the schools adjudicator, describes those who game the system as "thieves" whose actions deprive the more deserving of places of their own.
To lower in or deprive of spirit; dishearten.
It doesn't just deprive them of the beauty of women's faces; it offends the secularism that goes deep in European—and especially French—culture.
These trees deprive my house of light.
Mistakes can be enormously valuable, but when you try to get others to pay for your mistakes, then you deprive yourself of the opportunity to learn from them.
The spread of television have considerably deprive us of our time for reading.
Are you going to deprive me of my right not to sit down?
Don't deprive yourself but that banana split has just as many calories now as it did before you got pregnant.
Don't deprive yourself.
Today, if the bad bank pays above the fair-market value, it would raise the cost to taxpayers, imperil its political legitimacy, and deprive the market of badly needed transparency.