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Subjection   Listen
Subjection

noun
1.
Forced submission to control by others.  Synonym: subjugation.
2.
The act of conquering.  Synonyms: conquering, conquest, subjugation.






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"Subjection" Quotes from Famous Books



... The masochistic tendency of women, or their desire for subjection to the man they love. I believe no point in the whole question is more misunderstood than this. Nearly every man imagines that to secure a woman's love and respect he must give her her own way in small things, and compel her obedience ...
— Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Volume 3 (of 6) • Havelock Ellis

... of Blois was to Catherine de' Medici the narrowest of prisons. On the death of her husband, who had always held her in subjection, she expected to reign; but, on the contrary, she found herself crushed under the thraldom of strangers, whose polished manners were really far more brutal than those of jailers. No action of hers could ...
— Catherine de' Medici • Honore de Balzac

... his retreating figure. How good it was, after three years of subjection to the vulgar advances of just such fellows as he, to reflect that at last she was to have a protector! An almost unholy desire possessed her to see Bob climb aboard at the next station, twine his lean hands ...
— The Long Chance • Peter B. Kyne

... substitutes. They were prohibited from voting at vestries, or being high or petty constables. An act of the English Parliament in this reign opens as follows: —"Whereas attempts have been lately made to shake off the subjection of Ireland to the Imperial Crown of these realms, be it enacted," etc. etc. In the reign of George II. four- sixths of the population were cut off from the right of voting at elections by the necessity under which they were placed of taking the oath of supremacy. Barristers and solicitors ...
— Peter Plymley's Letters and Selected Essays • Sydney Smith

... being a courtier seems perhaps to have henceforth become less rose-coloured. A trivial incident happening while he was supping one night at Lady Arlington's, in June 1683, gave rise to the reflection that 'By this one may take an estimate of the extream slavery and subjection that courtiers live in, who have not time to eate and drink at their pleasure. It put me in mind of Horace's Mouse, and to blesse God for my owne private condition.' Twenty years previously he would not have ...
— Sylva, Vol. 1 (of 2) - Or A Discourse of Forest Trees • John Evelyn


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