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Being subject
noun
In a clause: the word or word group (usually a noun phrase) that is dealt with. In active clauses with verbs denoting an action, the subject and the actor are usually the same.
synonyms
Exact(60)
Being subject to lawsuits for their failures would surely encourage these companies to be more diligent.
These devices must fulfill several functions while being subject to mechanical, electromagnetic, vacuum and cryogenic constraints.
"You don't want an industrial corporation being subject, in effect, to government limits".
He is also listed as being subject to asset freezes in Britain.
She acknowledged the awkwardness of being subject to a patron's whims.
That includes being subject to Obamacare's employer mandate, they argued.The court's conservative justices disagreed.
Online shopping gives dramatically lower chance of being subject to physical violence.
The bones, being subject to air, water and heat, get completely dried and disintegrate.
Protesters taken into custody by the military have described being subject to torture and unfair trials.
Threats of being subject to the death penalty if suspects did not confess.
AFTER being subject to commissars in Moscow, some east Europeans are twitchy about commissioners in Brussels.
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