• In her mind, a woman with no child could be explained only by vast untrammelled calamity.

    NEWYORKER: Miss Lora

  • They do not see people simply as individual economic actors, untrammelled by ties, culture or history.

    ECONOMIST: David Willetts reshuffles Toryism

  • It helps, too, that even for an untrammelled if benign autocracy, Qatar's command structure is slim.

    ECONOMIST: The rise of Qatar

  • Until the 1880s, it was an area of scattered farms and untrammelled forests that were a refuge for runaway slaves.

    BBC: Bohemian Santa Teresa

  • But perhaps America's bigger mistake was to allow Mr Aristide's untrammelled rule to last as long as it did.

    ECONOMIST: Haiti after Aristide

  • He grew up with the untrammelled self-confidence and competitiveness of a brilliant loner.

    NEWYORKER: No Death, No Taxes

  • Untrammelled speculation in commodities and financial derivatives brought the financial world to the brink of collapse just three years ago.

    BBC: Has Western capitalism failed?

  • This is worth trying, because if America's subprime crisis demonstrates the pitfalls of untrammelled finance, India illustrates the opposite danger.

    ECONOMIST: Indian financial reform

  • Today's presidential campaigns are untrammelled by the constraints of time and money that bring sanity to politics in other countries.

    ECONOMIST: A hard day��s night

  • The developmental state is also a construction state, and too often the government seems to feel that nature untrammelled is a chance wasted.

    ECONOMIST: What Lee Myung-bak still needs to do

  • The American constitution vests its president with far more untrammelled authority in the foreign than the domestic sphere, so it is less easy to blame Congress for any failings.

    ECONOMIST: Mitt Romney abroad

  • He's one of very very few Welsh politicians with anything like widespread public recognition and enjoys untrammelled authority over his party thanks to the thumping mandate from the 2009 leadership election.

    BBC: State of Play 4 - Labour

  • Johnny Depp, who has made his name with misfits, outsiders, and untrammelled wackos, now turns his attention to John Wilmot, Second Earl of Rochester the scourge of seventeenth-century London, and by some distance the wickedest poet in the language.

    NEWYORKER: The Libertine

  • This showed, in complete contrast to the government's almost untrammelled power at Westminster, the more even balance between the powers of the Scottish executive and its Parliament, and the ability of backbenchers to make progress with private members' bills.

    ECONOMIST: Scotland

  • Testifying before the committee in April, Mr Clegg said the plans were not intended to give voters "an unlimited, unqualified, untrammelled right to trigger a by-election, whenever you happen to feel like it, because you don't like the cut of the jib of your local MP".

    BBC: Ditch plans for power to sack MPs, government urged

  • Whatever the final outcome of this case, Microsoft has always felt that stringing things out was in its best interests, allowing the firm to push ahead with its business strategy untrammelled for as long as possible: the freedom to innovate, as it would say, the freedom to intimidate, retort its critics.

    ECONOMIST: Microsoft gets a break

  • But it his fear -- as the title of his new book, "The Last Generation: How Nature Will Take Her Revenge for Climate Change" (it is called "With Speed and Violence" in the U.S.), suggests -- that we still haven't fully realised the apocalyptic forces we have awoken and the reality of what is at stake if global warming continues untrammelled.

    CNN: Climate change action: Too little, too late?

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