0 the state of being easily seen or well known:
Most of the papers give prominence to (= put in a noticeable position) the same story this morning.
It's the first time that a lawyer of such prominence (= fame and importance) has been given the freedom to air his views on TV.
Tina Fey came to/rose to/gained prominence as a writer and comedian on "Saturday Night Live".
I urge all those who teach in these areas to ensure that their reading lists give the book prominence.
Cuticular prominences as in the two previous instars occur on all the thoracic and abdominal segments except the prothorax, disposed as in the previous instar.
This niche saved them from competition with women in other professional groups as well as offering them a position of prominence in the women's movement.
We indicate the reduction in prominence on the second word in the above compounds by removing boldface type and the acute accent diacritic.
For homogenous document collections, where it is reasonable to assume the prominence of a topic, multi-document summarization can be largely driven by this assumption.
Word-internal alveolar stops in onsets and codas were also affected differently by prominence.
Based on the few detailed comparisons of phrase-level and word-level prominence, certain recurring interactions between word-level and phrase-level prominence have been identified.
In an age when technology and materialism seemed to have undermined religious faith, a new 'modern spiritualism' was suddenly born, and it exploded into prominence.
中文繁体
顯著,有名…
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显著,有名…
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prominencia, prominencia [feminine, singular]…
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proeminência…
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şan, şöhret, ün…
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importance [feminine], importance…
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důležitost…
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fremtrædende stilling…
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