0 US spelling of centrepiece --
1 the most important part of something: --
The centerpiece of most environmental studies is conservation.
After 1900, the doors of power opened to those who saw a national administrative apparatus as the centerpiece of a new governmental order.
For example, consider a centerpiece of our theory of the role of emotion regulation in the development of social competence in the developmentally delayed child.
Properly extended, full national income accounts can thus become the centerpiece of economic planning for sustainable development.
That was packaging: the technology - that is, the "hill-and-dale" method of acoustic recording - would remain the centerpiece of his technique.
The centerpiece of the book, however, is a chapter on the feminization of language.
Where does this leave medicine's "centerpiece," the patient - physician relationship?
Language acquisition has become the centerpiece for what we all do.
In a 1997 summit of the world's environmental leaders, the centerpiece for the discussion was children's health and the environment.