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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181) Beinn Eighe still dominated the landscape as we headed for Gairloch.
182) World markets dominated their economies, and they lacked the means for independent national economic development.
183) Of course poverty among older people predates retirement and this group have dominated the landscape of poverty since it was first described systematically.
184) The Union reflected the workforce, as the whole organization is white female dominated and infused with a liberal social conscience.
185) Certainly one was emerging, and its embryonic form was increasingly dominated by London.
186) It is no longer dominated by established tradition, or established religious beliefs; it has new populations with new sets of consciousness.
187) Or has the show been dominated by a faction from Goldsmith's College?
188) The Faculty in those days was comparatively small, and still dominated by old men who were primarily literary historians.
189) In his mid forties, he stood six feet and his aura of authority dominated the room.
190) Regardless of how reserved or proper they may have been before the stroke, their limited language is sometimes dominated by swearing.
191) However, just as hardware systems are dominated by engineering thinking, macro-systems are dominated by economic thinking.
192) It's almost embarrassing the way his Oxfordshire-based team have dominated Formula One this season.
193) The public image of telecommuting has been dominated by cottage cuteness.
194) Certain jobs were dominated by men until the equal opportunities legislation of the 1970s.
195) In its next, more public phase, it is likely to be dominated as much by events as by concepts.
196) In Britain, at least, communications are dominated by a few millionaire proprietors and a few large conglomerate companies.
197) It might well be more prudent to think of climatic influences on forms and erosion rates rather than climatically dominated landforms.
198) The other is dominated by workers with few skills, other than their willingness to work the hours required by their employers.
199) The red spruces and balsam firs that dominated the vegetation near the mountaintop thrived under high rainfall and cool temperatures.
200) This would be a radical departure from the subsidy system that has dominated the agricultural economy for more than 50 years.
201) The short, bitter election campaign is dominated by some unexpectedly useful economic statistics and a serious Tory gaffe over immigration.
202) Of the three methods being considered, this is the most controversial and it has dominated the debate about paying for water.
203) This huge stretch of coastline is dominated by offshore barrier islands built by the surf out of drifting sand.
204) Ministers will insist that, despite the image management, the party remains dominated by the left.
205) The turbulent and volatile consumer market is dominated by games, few of which embody any real information content.
206) Our exports are totally dominated by agriculture, so the present crisis is hurting.
207) The report dominated much of the news media for several days.
208) The eagle on the poster dominated the room, tall and black and proud on a scarlet background. Sentencedict.com
209) That was the nature of the oppression and the sense of being dominated which we all were familiar with.
210) Postmodernism points to a more organic, less differentiated enclave of organization than those dominated by the bureaucratic designs of modernity.
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.