0 the particular importance or attention that is given to something: --
1 special attention given to something because it is important or because you want it to be noticed, or an example of this: --
The development of radio and television, of new technologies to record speech, create new emphases whose significance it is as yet difficult to grasp.
Together they suggested not so much a diversity of views as a multitude of emphases within a collective concept.
We focus on four factors that may yield differential emphases on common nouns and main verbs across the three languages.
Historians have most commonly argued that this was achieved through emphases on non-communal, secular values.
Differential emotions theorists accept the general framework of the organizational perspective but qualify it by adding four distinct emphases.
Similarly, ' '' the council meets every day, and contrary to his practice the king is present ' '' (pp. 92 and 111, emphases mine).
The songbooks of the respective denominations differ from each other in several respects, having varying aims, personal emphases and religious content.
Though social and cultural emphases have always been strong, study of the early modern court more generally has undergone a similar process.