Similar words: dominant, predominant, dominate, domination, finance, ordinance, anno domini, domineering. Meaning: ['dɒmɪnəns] n. 1. superior development of one side of the body 2. the state that exists when one person or group has power over another 3. the organic phenomenon in which one of a pair of alleles present in a genotype is expressed in the phenotype and the other allele of the pair is not 4. the power or right to give orders or make decisions.
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31. Given that these change over time, the dominance of the industry by a certain nationality of institutions may be transitory.
32. This astonishing diversity manifested itself in great complexity of relationships and in our lacking dominance almost everywhere.
33. For the Treasury this presented a golden opportunity to recover its traditional dominance which it had lost during the war.
34. The mid-fielders ruled the roost up to the interval, but after a scoreless first half the Antrim team showed great dominance.
35. Its methods and values have rarely been able to challenge the dominance of conservative normativism.
36. In communities which were economically and socially based on growing rice,(http://sentencedict.com/dominance.html) Goyigama dominance was clear throughout the nineteenth century and beyond.
37. The Pluralist concern with management is, for the Structuralist, simply another means of ensuring the continued dominance of the rich.
38. They overlapped but each new phase rapidly established dominance in the world of information technology.
39. They liked books and ideas, and they liked to talk about them in ways that fostered growth rather than established dominance.
40. More important in establishing his general dominance was his closeness to the crown.
41. Quite the reverse, in such a scrum its historical dominance secures advantages.
42. They do have an inbuilt desire to lay down dominance over one another.
43. Kung San neighbors' hunting life for farming, there is less food sharing and more political dominance within each band.
44. Equally, market dominance is not in itself unlawful under Article 86 of the Treaty of Rome.
45. The Marxist tradition emphasises the dominance of capital in the economy of western nations.
46. In some the dominance of the lords was strong, in others the tradition of freedom much stronger.
47. During the period of dominance he identifies three distinct ways through which psychodynamic theories had a major influence on social work.
48. He under-estimated his side's dominance by two years, as Surrey held the champions' pennant from 1952-58.
49. Hayek views the growing dominance of the conception of law as thesis as posing a grave threat to liberty.
50. The incident suggested that the movement was seeking to extend its campaign for political dominance beyond the province of Natal.
51. No legal change in priority has been contemplated, so that drivers may continue to assume dominance over foot traffic in housing areas.
52. The Beat Generation and their fellow writers never rose to a position of world dominance on the literary scene.
53. That kind of cerebral dominance was subsequently confused with that other specialty of left-brain function: running the right hand.
54. The Traditionalists had always enjoyed unassailable dominance in politics and business.
55. The fears always have to do with undermining male solidarity and dominance.
56. Steel's ability to grow. New competitors quickly diminished the company's market dominance.
57. But they have more to lose: their traditional dominance of the field, their lock on the very notion of athleticism.
58. But the theorists do not specify precisely how important Fordism was, nor how its hypothesized dominance was established.
59. The episode dwelling on jurist Robert Bork succeeded, for example, despite dominance by Al Franken and Sen.
60. That dominance thrives on the enthusiasm for positive and effective government that is embedded in our political culture.
More similar words: dominant, predominant, dominate, domination, finance, ordinance, anno domini, domineering, ruminant, nominally, nominate, financial, penance, abominable, nomination, abomination, resonance, denomination, repugnance, sustenance, dissonance, countenance, maintenance, financial crisis, in advance, in advance of, in accordance with, randomization, inane, coming.