subjugate 的定义
sub·ju·gat·ed, sub·ju·gat·ing.
- to bring under complete control or subjection; conquer; master.
- to make submissive or subservient; enslave.
subjugate 近义词
overpower, defeat
更多subjugate例句
- The attack this week was deliberately coordinated to disrupt and violently subjugate the Congress.
- Nature is still here, but it is often subjugated and ignored.
- They struggled with feeling like a foreigner in their marital village, and often felt isolated, abandoned and that their voice was subjugated.
- The country’s modern history has been shaped by a desire to reverse what in China is known as the “century of humiliation” — when the proud and previously powerful nation was subjugated by Western powers, Russia and Japan before the 1940s.
- It does not help anyone to have a situation where there’s a whole generation of a workforce that feels so subjugated by their lack of access to clean water.
- They see collusion and deception and they say Ankara is determined to subjugate them.
- It was not an act of genocide, but it was the largest and most enduring program devised by man to subjugate a race.
- Fashion can summon the strange, can subjugate the body and render it alien just as readily as it can highlight every curve.
- The whole world is in my hand and I will conquer and subjugate the world.
- France could not hope to subjugate Spain; England could never possibly conquer France.
- Every religion, in its origin, was a restraint invented by legislators who wished to subjugate the minds of the common people.
- An attempt to subjugate these fierce tribes made by Pedro de Andia in 1538, failed.
- But she had absolutely nothing to subjugate except poor little Fairbridge.
- The conquering immigrant peoples subjugate the native races or crowd them back.
- Cleopatra eagerly repeated, and the desire awoke to subjugate this man who had so confidently boasted of his power of resistance.