subservience

Example Sentences

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Recent Examples of subservience And, in a development that has been decades in the making, civil-rights laws have been reduced to cudgels for coercing universities into subservience. Jeannie Suk Gersen, New Yorker, 15 Apr. 2025 Trump and Vance demand absolute loyalty and subservience – as seen in their interactions with Zelensky. Greg Orme, Forbes, 6 Mar. 2025 Trad wives are typically conservative, usually Christians and post about things like cooking, cleaning and subservience to their husbands. Charles Trepany, USA TODAY, 27 Feb. 2025 Virtually overnight, the new gender apartheid state rolled back laws and opportunities that had for decades already lifted Iranian women up from the subservience clerics demanded. Mariam Memarsadeghi, Newsweek, 13 Jan. 2025 See All Example Sentences for subservience
Recent Examples of Synonyms for subservience
Noun
  • The federal government’s success in strong-arming Ryan to resign and the UVA Board’s acquiescence to it have been viewed by higher education officials as one more alarming step by the Trump administration to strip away university autonomy and self-governance.
    Michael T. Nietzel, Forbes.com, 13 July 2025
  • Too many have chosen the politics of non-engagement, which is at best a hair’s breadth away from acquiescence or complicity.
    Kamila Shamsie June 20, Literary Hub, 20 June 2025
Noun
  • Yet electing to be private doesn’t amount to complaisance or complicity.
    Lesley M.M. Blume, Town & Country, 6 Dec. 2022
  • Sammy’s awareness of his mother’s infidelity, his father’s complaisance, and how both were relieved by his creative Boy Scout merit-badge projects and fantasies requires a separate article.
    Armond White, National Review, 16 Nov. 2022
Noun
  • Judges are no longer expected to defer to agency interpretation when a statute is ambiguous, meaning judicial deference to agencies, including those in the Trump administration, has been reduced.
    Michael McCann, Sportico.com, 22 July 2025
  • And in Loper Bright Enterprises vs. Raimondo (2024), the Court effectively overturned the Chevron doctrine, a 40-year precedent that had granted deference to federal agencies' interpretations of ambiguous laws.
    Robert Alexander, MSNBC Newsweek, 15 July 2025

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Cite this Entry

“Subservience.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/subservience. Accessed 6 Aug. 2025.

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