0 past simple and past participle of subject
1 to defeat people or a country and then control them against their wishes and limit their freedom:
This residue in its turn is then subjected to distillation under reduced pressure to give both a vacuum distillate and a vacuum residue.
Thus, each year the worms were subjected to selection pressure during 2 steps, and to genetic drift during 22 steps.
The study samples were subjected to a further selection according to a series of criteria.
The samples were subjected to three emergence trials under drained, waterlogged and submerged conditions.
The piece consists uniquely of sounds created by the atomic noise model, subjected only to minor volume and panning effects.
After a club or bar had been raided officers subjected the floor, cloakroom, and furniture to meticulous scrutiny.
The lectures were apparently subjected to little revision in the transcription process other than adjustments to compensate for the lack of aural illustration.
Excretory+secretory products were subjected to centrifugation (11000 g for 20 min) to remove daughter sporocysts.