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The phrase "a subservience to" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a state of being submissive or obedient to someone or something, often in a hierarchical context.
Example: "Her actions reflected a subservience to the demands of her employer, prioritizing work over her personal life."
Alternatives: "an obedience to" or "a submission to".
Exact(3)
Have designers become so esoteric that they see no other implications in their "obscuring garments" except a subservience to creative vision?
Moreover, it astutely underscores their family ties and a subservience to the royal family that make Laertes's outrage all the more sympathetic once his father and sister have died.
It is an approach that has partly been shaped by America-envy (deals are always bigger and flashier on Wall Street) but also by a subservience to the City and its demands for quick growth and shareholder returns.
Similar(57)
His second term has been increasingly marked by his evangelical belief in laissez faire, a blithe subservience to big money private interests, and a devotion to grands projets while neglecting most Londoners' more pressing needs.
Australian surfers' preoccupation with the Californian nose-riding style, which valued "posture over performance," was emblematic of what Witzig saw as a broader subservience to America.
It would have required the inconceivable from the Liberal Democrats – a lasting, whipped subservience to a losing party that many of them cordially loathed.
The dismissal of Whitlam in 1975 encouraged the belief that essentially Australia was not a democracy and that it suffered much from a heritage of subservience to British imperial standards.
It's all done "to bring about a mentality of subservience to authority".
Accordingly, Himmler placed himself in a position of subservience to Hitler, and was unconditionally obedient to him.
A footballer squirms at the thought of subservience to a manager with fewer commercial endorsements and less money; a general balks at being one of the few living people who doesn't publicise his opinions.
Sure, only 46 senators ultimately voted against extending background checks, but the fact that this relatively innocuous measure was the only gun control amendment that had a chance of passing indicates a broader epidemic of subservience to the gun lobby.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com