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单词 dominion
释义

Definition of dominion in English:

dominion

noun dəˈmɪnjəndəˈmɪnjən
  • 1mass noun Sovereignty or control.

    man's attempt to establish dominion over nature
    Example sentencesExamples
    • There's no sign that any monarch would have recognised the concept, given that throughout history they'd a habit of claiming dominion over many nations.
    • To consider work and the worker in the light of humanity's dominion over the earth goes to the very heart of the ethical and social question.
    • To further empower corporate dominion over nation-states, it gives private corporations and investors ‘legal standing’ to sue sovereign governments.
    • Those who advocate corporate dominion over broadband services dismiss the notion that consumer choice will be curtailed.
    • I was filled with fantasies of my new life, a life of travel, financial laissez-faire, and total dominion over my own space.
    • Expectations that wild animals be seen and not heard, that they not get too close, reveal that we still believe we hold dominion over animals and nature.
    • That is when the state takes dominion over the highways, treating them as their own.
    • The revisionists' dominion over the domestic side of Cold War history has been even more total.
    • It identifies the restoration of dominion over the powers in the new humanity.
    • In truth they are animated by nothing but their own lust for power and their desire for dominion over others.
    • Humans can labour with their hands and brains, can plan and develop productive techniques, and have amassed centuries of culture and knowledge that have enabled them to control and hold dominion over the rest of nature.
    • From public schools to elementary schools, the history of the empire was still little taught, while for most young people Empire Day meant an extra holiday rather than a commitment to dominion over palm and pine.
    • But of course, not everything in the garden is lovely, and there are times when nature's dominion over the humble gardener can be infuriating.
    • Traditions teach us that we should have dominion over nature, and not be a part of nature.
    • The cells reduced all other species to near elimination, and established dominion over the corporeal plane of the entity.
    • Such dominion, already established with the water mill and other mechanisations, became part of the perspective of the new intellectuals.
    • By the time Orwell returned to England in 1927 he had a hatred not just of colonialism, but of ‘every form of man's dominion over man’.
    • You grit your teeth in pride as the machine roars to terrible life, proclaiming your dominion over all who dare to get in your way.
    • We have dominion over the plants, the animals, the trees.
    • All activities by which we shape and maintain our world, in all of its many complexities, also are an expression of the power of dominion over the world.
    Synonyms
    supremacy, ascendancy, dominance, domination, superiority, predominance, pre-eminence, primacy, hegemony, authority, mastery, control, command, direction, power, sway, rule, government, jurisdiction, sovereignty, suzerainty, lordship, overlordship
    leadership, influence
    the upper hand, the whip hand, the edge, advantage, hold, grasp
    archaic empire
    rare predomination, paramountcy, prepotence, prepotency, prepollency
    1. 1.1
      another term for dominium
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In the end neither feudal loyalties, the absolute dominion of property ownership, nor even romance is vindicated.
      • The conclusion which he arrives at flows from his application of the concept of adverse dominion, and that by dint of adverse dominion, the claimants obtained the right to all of the resources.
      • Even more important, however, was the very act of possession: ownership demonstrated dominion.
  • 2DominionThe territory of a sovereign or government.

    the Angevin dominions
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Subsequently, the Spanish empire and its Italian dominions formed the dominant pole of both political theory and political practice in the peninsula.
    • There are reasons to defend a poor people, to revolt against an evil government, seize dominions, disagreements, holding land, invasion, self-defense, and so on and so forth.
    • Indeed in 1892, when it was necessary to appoint a new Poet Laureate, Queen Victoria is reported to have said to Gladstone: ‘I am told that Mr Swinburne is the best poet in my dominions.’
    • To these were added a number of European kingdoms and the Spanish dominions in the Americas when Charles was sixteen, and by the age of nineteen he had added the Hapsburg Empire to his possessions.
    • These mass marketing dominions have attitudes struck with such unbelievable good cheer and personalities so beaming they outshine the Northern lights.
    • His dominions included all the lands from the Baltic to the country beyond the Carpathians, and from the River Oder to the provinces beyond the Vistula.
    • In many respects the government has allowed the northern sultanates to apply their own laws in their dominions, and in return the leaders of these ministates lend their support to national governmental structures.
    • But they are also fully aware that all the powers and dominions of the earth are arrayed against them and regularly torment them.
    • He has invaded the dominions of winter and threaded the tangled equatorial jungles of the Amazon.
    • So the imperialists had to wait until 1932, when food import tariffs were introduced generally again, and a series of bilateral agreements negotiated with the dominions and colonies to favour them.
    • All states and dominions which hold or have held sway over mankind are either republics or monarchies.
    • The union leadership has bolstered this tactic by placing control of their respective territorial dominions ahead of the welfare of the union membership.
    • The ‘specifically asked for it’ clause was necessary because in some instances the dominions did not have the full legal structure of independent nations.
    • Just as oil and water do not mix, neither do art and life: They are separate and sovereign dominions that coexist without mixing, each with its own idiosyncrasies, values, and morality.
    • Well then, this is the king's command, that you leave the kingdom and all his other dominions with everything belonging to you, for from this day there can be no peace between him and you or any of your people because you have broken the peace.
    • They have extended their dominions, played with the life and property of their fellow beings, extracted wealth through taxes and tithes from some and bestowed their bounties on others.
    • Acceptance - learning to live within the dominions of your entire person - is the ultimate goal.
    • Essentially, this involved the welding into a composite monarchy of those territories ruled by medieval kings as ‘parcels’ or dominions of the English crown.
    • America, he noted, has ‘achieved a degree of power in the contemporary world community which dwarfs the dominions of the empires of the past’.
    • An energetic ruler, he dispatched naval expeditions to Sri Lanka and presided over the military and mercantile expansion of the Pallava dominions.
    Synonyms
    dependency, colony, protectorate, territory, province, outpost, satellite, satellite state
    holding, possession
    historical tributary, fief
    archaic demesne
    (dominions), realm, kingdom, empire, domain, country, nation, land
    1. 2.1Dominionhistorical Each of the self-governing territories of the British Commonwealth.
      Great Britain, together with her Dominions and Colonies
      Example sentencesExamples
      • For half a century the Queen has graced the throne of Britain, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and her other dominions as well as performing her duties throughout the Commonwealth, to which she is so devoted.
      • War itself brought changes as the status of self-governing dominions moved toward de facto independence.
      • The British North America Act created the Dominion of Canada by 1867.
      • Self-governing dominions in the British Empire - such as Canada and after 1947 India - also had one vote each.
      • In 1907, New Zealand was made a Dominion of Great Britain.
  • 3dominions

    another term for domination (sense 2)
    Example sentencesExamples
    • From top to bottom, the celestial hierarchy includes seraphim, cherubim, thrones; dominions, virtues, powers; principalities, archangels, and angels.

Origin

Middle English: via Old French from medieval Latin dominio(n-), from Latin dominium, from dominus 'lord, master'.

Rhymes

Argentinian, Arminian, Augustinian, Carthaginian, Darwinian, Guinean, Justinian, Ninian, Palestinian, Sardinian, Virginian
 
 

Definition of dominion in US English:

dominion

noundəˈmɪnjəndəˈminyən
  • 1Sovereignty or control.

    man's attempt to establish dominion over nature
    Example sentencesExamples
    • From public schools to elementary schools, the history of the empire was still little taught, while for most young people Empire Day meant an extra holiday rather than a commitment to dominion over palm and pine.
    • That is when the state takes dominion over the highways, treating them as their own.
    • The revisionists' dominion over the domestic side of Cold War history has been even more total.
    • By the time Orwell returned to England in 1927 he had a hatred not just of colonialism, but of ‘every form of man's dominion over man’.
    • Expectations that wild animals be seen and not heard, that they not get too close, reveal that we still believe we hold dominion over animals and nature.
    • Such dominion, already established with the water mill and other mechanisations, became part of the perspective of the new intellectuals.
    • Humans can labour with their hands and brains, can plan and develop productive techniques, and have amassed centuries of culture and knowledge that have enabled them to control and hold dominion over the rest of nature.
    • There's no sign that any monarch would have recognised the concept, given that throughout history they'd a habit of claiming dominion over many nations.
    • Traditions teach us that we should have dominion over nature, and not be a part of nature.
    • You grit your teeth in pride as the machine roars to terrible life, proclaiming your dominion over all who dare to get in your way.
    • It identifies the restoration of dominion over the powers in the new humanity.
    • I was filled with fantasies of my new life, a life of travel, financial laissez-faire, and total dominion over my own space.
    • We have dominion over the plants, the animals, the trees.
    • In truth they are animated by nothing but their own lust for power and their desire for dominion over others.
    • To consider work and the worker in the light of humanity's dominion over the earth goes to the very heart of the ethical and social question.
    • The cells reduced all other species to near elimination, and established dominion over the corporeal plane of the entity.
    • But of course, not everything in the garden is lovely, and there are times when nature's dominion over the humble gardener can be infuriating.
    • To further empower corporate dominion over nation-states, it gives private corporations and investors ‘legal standing’ to sue sovereign governments.
    • All activities by which we shape and maintain our world, in all of its many complexities, also are an expression of the power of dominion over the world.
    • Those who advocate corporate dominion over broadband services dismiss the notion that consumer choice will be curtailed.
    Synonyms
    supremacy, ascendancy, dominance, domination, superiority, predominance, pre-eminence, primacy, hegemony, authority, mastery, control, command, direction, power, sway, rule, government, jurisdiction, sovereignty, suzerainty, lordship, overlordship
  • 2DominionThe territory of a sovereign or government.

    the Angevin dominions
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Indeed in 1892, when it was necessary to appoint a new Poet Laureate, Queen Victoria is reported to have said to Gladstone: ‘I am told that Mr Swinburne is the best poet in my dominions.’
    • There are reasons to defend a poor people, to revolt against an evil government, seize dominions, disagreements, holding land, invasion, self-defense, and so on and so forth.
    • All states and dominions which hold or have held sway over mankind are either republics or monarchies.
    • To these were added a number of European kingdoms and the Spanish dominions in the Americas when Charles was sixteen, and by the age of nineteen he had added the Hapsburg Empire to his possessions.
    • These mass marketing dominions have attitudes struck with such unbelievable good cheer and personalities so beaming they outshine the Northern lights.
    • An energetic ruler, he dispatched naval expeditions to Sri Lanka and presided over the military and mercantile expansion of the Pallava dominions.
    • America, he noted, has ‘achieved a degree of power in the contemporary world community which dwarfs the dominions of the empires of the past’.
    • So the imperialists had to wait until 1932, when food import tariffs were introduced generally again, and a series of bilateral agreements negotiated with the dominions and colonies to favour them.
    • The ‘specifically asked for it’ clause was necessary because in some instances the dominions did not have the full legal structure of independent nations.
    • Subsequently, the Spanish empire and its Italian dominions formed the dominant pole of both political theory and political practice in the peninsula.
    • Well then, this is the king's command, that you leave the kingdom and all his other dominions with everything belonging to you, for from this day there can be no peace between him and you or any of your people because you have broken the peace.
    • Acceptance - learning to live within the dominions of your entire person - is the ultimate goal.
    • They have extended their dominions, played with the life and property of their fellow beings, extracted wealth through taxes and tithes from some and bestowed their bounties on others.
    • Essentially, this involved the welding into a composite monarchy of those territories ruled by medieval kings as ‘parcels’ or dominions of the English crown.
    • But they are also fully aware that all the powers and dominions of the earth are arrayed against them and regularly torment them.
    • The union leadership has bolstered this tactic by placing control of their respective territorial dominions ahead of the welfare of the union membership.
    • In many respects the government has allowed the northern sultanates to apply their own laws in their dominions, and in return the leaders of these ministates lend their support to national governmental structures.
    • His dominions included all the lands from the Baltic to the country beyond the Carpathians, and from the River Oder to the provinces beyond the Vistula.
    • He has invaded the dominions of winter and threaded the tangled equatorial jungles of the Amazon.
    • Just as oil and water do not mix, neither do art and life: They are separate and sovereign dominions that coexist without mixing, each with its own idiosyncrasies, values, and morality.
    Synonyms
    dependency, colony, protectorate, territory, province, outpost, satellite, satellite state
    1. 2.1Dominionhistorical Each of the self-governing territories of the British Commonwealth.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The British North America Act created the Dominion of Canada by 1867.
      • For half a century the Queen has graced the throne of Britain, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and her other dominions as well as performing her duties throughout the Commonwealth, to which she is so devoted.
      • In 1907, New Zealand was made a Dominion of Great Britain.
      • Self-governing dominions in the British Empire - such as Canada and after 1947 India - also had one vote each.
      • War itself brought changes as the status of self-governing dominions moved toward de facto independence.
  • 3dominions

    another term for domination (sense 2)
    Example sentencesExamples
    • From top to bottom, the celestial hierarchy includes seraphim, cherubim, thrones; dominions, virtues, powers; principalities, archangels, and angels.

Origin

Middle English: via Old French from medieval Latin dominio(n-), from Latin dominium, from dominus ‘lord, master’.

 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/23 9:45:28