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to conquests
noun
Victory gained through combat; the subjugation of an enemy.
Similar(59)
Still, it twitches in his letters to Conquest like a phantom limb.
The area is as prone to drought as it was, historically, to conquest.
The collection of the Budapest Museum of Fine Arts owes much less to conquest than that of most European museums.
"Britain was not like the continent of Europe," Thomas explains, "where populations felt vulnerable to conquest.
"For G.M. to grow its sales, we need to conquest buyers from the competition, and parity doesn't conquest sales -- differentiators do".
Amis forwarded letters to his married lovers from his university office in Swansea, Wales, to Conquest in London.
In Lovelace's letters to his friend Belford, Richardson shows that what is driving him to conquest and finally to rape is really her superiority.
Slower, more rational development would have lessened the damage to the environment, given Native Americans a chance to adapt to conquest and perhaps saved thousands of lives.
Competition among Ravahiny's 12 sons divided the kingdom in the early 19th century and opened the path to conquest by the Merina before 1850.
Soon thereafter we find Dizzy leading not only the school but the entire town to conquest, meaning victory in the big game.
Year in, year out, there was resistance to conquest, and rebellion against occupation, often followed by mutiny and revolt – by individuals, groups, armies and entire peoples.
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