Similar words: solar prominence, prominent, prominently, eminence, abstinence, eminent, promise, imminent. Meaning: ['prɑmɪnəns /'prɒ-] n. 1. the state of being prominent: widely known or eminent 2. relative importance 3. something that bulges out or is protuberant or projects from its surroundings.
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61. She would not achieve this position of prominence through conquest but through example and inspiration.
62. It is the second role which has recently come into greater prominence.
63. Social disorder is not new but throughout history, it has had varying degrees of prominence as a problem.
64. The speech received much applause, and my remarks about the regalia were given prominence in the next day's papers.
65. Perhaps the title of this translation gives it too much prominence.
66. At this time the Yohkoh images showed faint X-ray emission from a large closed magnetic field structure above the prominence.
67. The A.P.R. must always be given greater prominence than any statement relating to any other rate of charge. 6.
68. But it would be hazardous to assume that prominence and deviance are simply subjective and objective aspects of the same phenomenon.
69. Ten years later, Zhou took the first case that would catapult him into national prominence.
70. They would blaze into prominence just as the foreground planting was falling to pieces.
71. The obtrusive tone of the tuba makes it extremely useful in bringing important bass passages into prominence.
72. That leaves Bush, in Texas, poised to reach national prominence as a Republican advocating a cooler approach to the issue.
73. Only lately had experiments with iron sheathing been achieving prominence.
74. The method came to prominence through the activities of Frederick Bligh Bond, a highly respected authority on medieval church architecture.
75. Both offerings demonstrate the need for sin to be dealt with objectively, and give prominence to the use of the blood.
76. Pompeii lay in verdant, wine-growing country and so gave special prominence to Venus, goddess of fecundity, Hercules and Bacchus.
76. Sentencedict.com is a sentence dictionary, on which you can find excellent sentences for a large number of words.
77. The Huskies have gained their prominence partly at the expense of Cal.
78. He came to prominence, however, as a leading financier for the parliamentary side in the civil war.
79. His rise to prominence in sport commenced with the establishment of the Birmingham Canoe Club in the early 1950s.
80. This has largely led to a reduction in overall-activity, but the control of mosquitoes by means of insecticide retains its prominence.
81. Professor Gimbutas has traced the prominence in later Goddess art of precisely that image, parallel curved lines.
82. Krickstein first rocketed to prominence at the 1983 U.S. Open.
83. Blanton was the crucial figure in giving the bass greater prominence.
84. The 8 p.m. news bulletin each evening gave prominence to presidential and governmental words and deeds.
85. Proceedings around the Biennial this year give a new prominence to performing arts.
86. Some instruments receive far more prominence than they do in more everyday tunes, others get merely the lightest, occasional touch.
87. He retired from public life for a few years and then returned to full prominence.
88. On the contrary, it is the formal properties of the device which are commonly given prominence.
89. It is the kind of story that stays news, and that is why it must be given prominence.
90. Though their long history from the early Cambrian to the present different groups of articulate brachiopods rose to prominence only to decline.
More similar words: solar prominence, prominent, prominently, eminence, abstinence, eminent, promise, imminent, promised, promising, compromise, pre-eminent, promissory, nominee, promiscuous, domineer, preeminently, eminent domain, promiscuously, uncompromising, dominance, domineering, predominance, in essence, providence, inexperience, absence of mind, subsistence farming, pertinent, proponent.