0 present participle of subjugate
1 to defeat people or a country and rule them in a way that allows them no freedom
2 to treat yourself, your wishes, or your beliefs as being less important than other people or their wishes or beliefs:
Reporters must subjugate personal political convictions to their professional commitment to balance.
The characteristic of the dogmatic miracle, on the other hand, consists in despotically subjugating the search of understanding for such an explanation, while seeking its effect precisely in this subjugation.
They are in the business of subjugating ordinary working men and women.
Negotiations on the new framework agreement cannot leave aside the issue of human rights, subjugating everything to commercial interests.
It is subjugating our peoples.
They are also heavily imperialistic, subjugating other levels with value-priced food.
This article laments the corrosive and subjugating ritual of attending "sguwlz".
They plan on subjugating humanity to harvest their mitochondria for food.
Viruses can not reproduce on their own, and instead propagate by subjugating a host cell to produce copies of themselves, thus producing the next generation.