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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151) The diminutive guard from Arizona dominated the overtime, scoring 10 of the Raptors' 19 points.
152) The Republicans had dominated presidential politics for almost twenty-five years when Clinton began his bid for the White House.
153) The McLaren-Honda partnership, which had dominated F1 racing since 1988, was relegated to the role of also-rans.
154) This is because the Congress is dominated by large landowners and the Presidents themselves owned hefty chunks.
155) Even sounds at night dominated us, as the firelight picked out bright eyes, blinking through the darkness.
156) Scargill dominated the hearings with his presence like some grand master of ceremonies.
157) Chamber 7e is dominated by a man-size iron cage which hangs from a ceiling hook.
158) The newspapers were dominated by news and analysis of the leadership election.
159) The heavily favored Cowboys dominated the news with their strong personalities and big egos.
160) It is a curious fact that the Nizan Case was ultimately dominated more by fiction than by fact.
161) Anthropological discussion of this relationship between self, object and society is dominated by the more general analysis or exchange.
162) For centuries, the infantry, particularly if properly coordinated with the other combat arms available, dominated the battlefield.
163) It was as patriarch that Michael Romanov's father, Filaret, dominated the government between 1618 and 1633.
164) The northern industrial regions, in contrast, were dominated by the older sectors which had been the basis of earlier expansion.
165) A succession of marquees led to the fairground complex, dominated by a great ferris wheel.
166) The issue of the republics' future within the Yugoslav federation dominated the electoral campaigns.
167) The early search firms were dominated by two types of individuals.
168) The issues of race and culture dominated the debate over the bill, especially during an attempt by Rep.
169) Nineteenth-century prints show how it dominated the skyline and the area around.
170) Governors should control the money with this end in view and must not allow their thinking to become dominated by financial concerns.
171) This got Jim's blood boiling and, driving like a tiger, he dominated from the start.
172) In an election dominated by the constitutional question, only the Conservatives have been committed to maintaining the statusquo.
173) Second-wave western feminism has been dominated by racist and eurocentric assumptions.
174) As for insurance, the market for horses is dominated by nine main companies with an estimated bloodstock trade of £400 million.
175) Since early this spring, the president has aggressively dominated the political dialogue and controlled the campaign agenda.
176) For nearly forty-five years, the two Superpowers had dominated international politics, alliances, and trade arrangements.
177) Her own stand is dominated by a burst of swansdown in shades of pink ranging from cerise to baby blush.
178) For tens of thousands of years the creative power of the divine female body dominated spiritual awareness.
179) This small band of women writers dominated the romantic fiction market for a number of years.
180) From then on their superior passing dominated large areas of the match.
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.