Dictionary
is subservience
noun
The state of being subservient.
Exact(2)
What it means is subservience to an imagined future.
The overwhelming, driving bias of the US media is subservience to power, whoever happens to be wielding it.
Similar(56)
Modern dance arose partly in opposition to ballet, and one of the fripperies of ballet that some early modern dancers were determined to throw off was subservience to music.
There can't be subservience.' Iraq will be allowed to control its oil revenues, which will raise $48 billion a year within the next three years, although it will have to pay tens of billions of pounds in reparations imposed following the Gulf war.
But in the case of GMOs, the ignorance of not knowing what is in your food is not bliss, it's subservience to Monsanto and its allies.
The most significant reason for E. Germany's situation is its subservience to the Soviet Union.
What can end, however, is the subservience of those in Asia to the dominant western worldview.
As with all monarchical nations – mostly in northern Europe – it is this subservience that allowed them to survive.
And what I find even more nauseating is the subservience of the government in this country to these policies.
Erickson contends that a central failing of the Republican Party is its subservience to the business elite: The Republican Establishment gets their head patted as they sip wine with major C.E.O.s who want Washington to just do something.
But the piece strikes me as a dated curio at a time when the real trahison des clercs is less subservience to tyranny than surrender to an increasingly threadbare popular culture.
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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