Similar words: dominate, predominate, dominator, domination, dominating, nominate, abominate, laminated. Meaning: ['dɑmɪneɪt /'dɒm] adj. 1. controlled or ruled by superior authority or power 2. harassed by persistent nagging.
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91) It dominated the room so that he and Alice Mair stood for a moment, silently regarding it.
92) In its former glory it must have dominated the whole dale below from Richmond to Hawes.
93) Inevitably London, the greatest centre of mass and conspicuous consumption, dominated with its tremendous appetite.
94) The neighborhood is dominated by the Waterloo train station and peopled by derelicts late at night.
95) The advisory committee which decided on research and development money for renewable energy was dominated by nuclear proponents.
96) Traditionally the criminal work in the busy city magistrates' courts had been dominated by three firms.
97) Foreign policy Foreign affairs during this period were dominated by the Gulf crisis.
98) The period you so fondly remember was dominated by activist and economically unschooled regulators and judges.
99) Here we may discern a connection with the Whig imagery of balance which dominated constitutional writing a century earlier.
100) Stewart loved the trips to Avon and the social whirl that dominated his life.
101) Dole, raised in a Democratic family, registered as a Republican because the party dominated local politics.
102) In the living-room, a smoked glass hi-fi dominated the mahogany wall unit, huge speakers beside it.
103) Schaffhausen is dominated by the sixteenth-century Munol fortress, perched on top of a hillock and towering over half-timbered houses sleeping by the water.
104) The traditional Asquithian-Liberal section of the party, which dominated the constituencies believed in the need to reiterate the established Liberal shibboleths.
105) Well, I hope so, and not just because my own wardrobe is decidedly denim dominated.
106) Warlords operated in the west, and the east was dominated by an independent anarchist force, the green armies of Makhno.
107) Even while the system remains capitalist it may at different phases be dominated by differently organized social and economic structures.
108) As his eyes adjusted to the dimness he began to feel dominated by the blank stares of the plaster martyrs.
109) For some years now, the amateur market has been dominated by one-piece machines and separates have virtually disappeared from the scene.
110) It dominated the world of man and was represented by the celestial firmament.
111) The Berlin intelligence scene was dominated by one of the most charismatic figures in post-war espionage - General Reinhard Gehlen.
112) Massive database management may be one area that could be dominated by optical technology.
113) In Atlanta, the Marlins dominated a team that won 101 games and became the first franchise to reach six straight postseasons.
114) The trade unions dominated the conference and endorsed the policies of their leaders.
115) Of course, the assumption behind this is precisely that enunciated by Barnes, that woman are dominated by their reproductive organs.
116) The issue dominated the campaign, prompting many commentators to characterize the election as a virtual referendum on the independence issue.
117) Parliament remained dominated by the aristocracy and by the landed gentry.
118) Men are emotionally dominated - their minds are always overwhelmed by the power of emotions, and often tend to believe what the heart feels. Dr T.P.Chia
118) Sentencedict.com try its best to collect and build good sentences.
119) Their remarkable development since then is typified by their disappointment at not winning a game they dominated with excellent football.
120) This explains why Minton was so fascinated by portraits which during his time at Allen Street more or less dominated his oeuvre.
More similar words: dominate, predominate, dominator, domination, dominating, nominate, abominate, laminated, illuminated, contaminated, dominant, dominance, predominant, predominance, dominant allele, nomination, denominator, abomination, denomination, ruminate, nondenominational, fulminate, eliminate, germinate, culminate, terminate, incriminate, illuminate, effeminate, fascinated.