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.
To share in that subjugating power, people create a false self, a pleasing-to-others image of themselves that springs from a powerful, deep-seated fear of being hurt, humiliated or abandoned.
Patently, the object of social ontology does not consist of fixed entities, which somehow exist behind historical and social phenomena directing and subjugating them to any form of determinism.
In addition, it often requires that the therapist help the patient fight punitive, demanding, or subjugating parent modes or schemas.
We can not ascend to a position of dominance over the voice, subjugating its words to the meanings we desire to attribute to them.
As mayor, he was charged with subjugating the indigenous groups in the region who opposed the distribution of communal lands.
That which you consider worth subjugating is (like) yourself.
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.
They plan on subjugating humanity to harvest their mitochondria for food.