0 past simple and past 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.
Additionally, social actors, however they are vertically categorised by the 'dominant' culture, do not always view themselves as subjugated.
For economic purposes to be legitimate for professionalism, they too must be subjugated to the extent that no self-promotion occurs unless it is in the service of professionalism.
Their interest is in how languages are used to legitimize, challenge and negotiate specific identities, and to open new identity options for groups and individuals who are subjugated.
In applied linguistics, the questioning of unity is usually construed through objections to autonomous monolingual language policies imposed on a variety of hierarchically demoralized and subjugated linguistic minorities.
First, the purpose of medical ethics, so to speak, is to protect individuals from each other and from institutions - from being ignored or subjugated by others.
Midwives as the traditional primary birth attendants were discredited, and women subjugated within the institutional machine of the hospital.
Under stateless or nearly stateless conditions, individuals subjugated themselves and expressed allegiance to leaders voluntarily.
She therefore applies the hermeneutic/dialogic method of understanding to give voice to a set of subjugated truth claims.