Exact(8)
Following the war, military applications lost prominence.
Nevertheless, mementos of the city's lost prominence were still present.
They lost prominence during the 1930s, as well as in the 1960s and 1970s, when social upheaval and women's liberation made them seem anachronistic, or like cattle markets.
But as economists have become more concerned about economic growth, and more informed about inflation and unemployment, the Keynesian model has lost prominence.
Northern Ireland has lost prominence in the UK affairs; its secretaries of state have small salience and not much to do.
Soon it had not only abandoned its hopes of displacing Chicago but had even lost prominence to Dubuque, Iowa, which sits on the opposite bank of the Mississippi.
Similar(52)
David's pupil, Antoine-Jean Gros, had, like David, represented "the grandiosities of a school irredeemably associated with a lost cause", but in some major works, he had given equal prominence to Napoleon and anonymous dead or dying figures.
Stokes returned to some prominence through a book by Anne Summers, published in 2009, called The Lost Mother, in which Stokes and her paintings are central to a narrative about Summers' own family.
They long for prominence.
#Lost © Washington Post .
They equate prominence with frequency.
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