Dictionary
subjugation
noun
The act of subjugating.
Exact(8)
Related: Ireland is facing its sectarian past – now it's England's turn | Fintan O'Toole Irish jokes are not new; they've been around for more than 900 years, started by the English as a method of subjugation.
But the fight against female subjugation needs to operate on every level.
Bolt said the requirement amounted to the "subjugation of women" and said the ensemble looked "ridiculous" on the foreign minister, who was in Iran for the first high-level meeting between Canberra and Tehran in 12 years.
It's probably to be expected that, as a transgender man, he muses a lot about "the subjugation of the feminine aspect by the male".
Sandwiched between two wars in which Scottish and English soldiers fought and died together was a horrifying civil conflict in Spain that led to Franco's 40-year dictatorship and the subjugation of Catalonia.
Afghanistan's sky-high fertility seems consistent with a view of the country as trapped in an exceptional and dysfunctional mode of development, marked by war, religious extremism, tribal honour codes and the subjugation of women.But this fertility rate was always a bit of a guess.
The notion that a few decades of civil-rights laws and a bit of affirmative action (often doled out grudgingly) have redressed centuries of slavery and subjugation has been exposed as hubris.
Ieyasu, favourable at first, soon came to deem the risk of subjugation by foreigners, with their formidable ships and weaponry, too high a price to pay for the wealth it brought his exchequer.So the squeeze began.
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