Spain, 289; subserviency to France, and relations with N.
This rule was annexed to an extensive table, representing the quantities of sugar per gallon corresponding to the specific gravities of the syrup, constructed by the author for the Excise, in subserviency to the Beet-root Bill.
The first person who sought to investigate the general principles of chimney draughts, in subserviency to manufacturing establishments, was the celebrated Montgolfier.
Next, he perceives that these results could never have taken place unless foreseen and provided for by a designed subserviency of means to ends, and this convinces him of the Personality of that universal Mind.
Order implies what by analogy we call intelligence; subserviency to an observed end implies intelligence foreseeing which by analogy, we call Design.
Both are classified by men, both may be defined by their subserviency to human interests,--it is sufficient to discover some use in each.
For nearly thirty years he acted the tyrant over the inhabitants of the country, and brought the entire mass into the most unresisting subserviency to his will.
It will be necessary to establish the foundation of the rights of acquisition, alienation, and transmission, not in imaginary contracts or a pretended state of nature, but in their subserviency to the subsistence and well-being of mankind.
God in a subserviencyto his working in or bestowing on them the good promised.
He carried his subserviency so far as to cross the Alps and receive the wages of his obedience, the papal tiara, at Lyons.
Franklin made a great mistake in not agreeing with him, for in the suspicious state of people's minds at that time his conduct in this respect was taken as proof positive of his subserviency to the French court.
To cherish this connection would be the policy of the court of Versailles; there would result from it a dependent relation, an habitual subserviency of the weaker power, a family compact of perpetual union, always opposed to Great Britain.
England alone took sides with Louis Philippe: thence thesubserviency of our policy to that of England.
This means the destruction of the Catholic episcopate, or its total subserviency to the state.
But the thing that seems to have struck Walpole most, was the subserviency of Christian's ministers and attendants, who (as we shall see presently) bowed as low to him at every word as if he were a Sultan Amurath.
That he did not love Reventlow, whose rough mode of education he had not yet forgotten, is only natural; Moltke he knew to be a man who only regarded his own interests, while Bernstorff's vanity and cringing subserviency were repulsive to him.
Alas, the weakest of the weak, and the desperately wicked, often occupy the high places of the earth, reducing every thing within their reach to subserviency to the foulest purposes.
A less enlightened statesman than Barneveld would have found it easy enough to demonstrate the inconsistency of the King in thus preaching subserviency of government to church and favouring the rule of Puritans over both.
Envy, jealousy, political and clerical hate, above all, that deadliest and basest of malignant spirits which in partisan warfare is bred out of subserviency to rising and rival power, were swarming about him and stinging him at every step.
The immediate cause of Raynsford's removal was the desire of the government to have a chief justice of the King's Bench on whose vigor and subserviency reliance could be placed, to counteract the apprehended machinations of Shaftesbury.
Scott, in after years, when his political subserviency had been rewarded by two fat crown livings, used to make what he considered a good story out of this embassy to the poet.
Hardenberg was perfectly right when he said the English nation pays off the meanest subserviency to their own aristocracy by hunting down all that is noble in every state of Europe.
Mark the base and unworthy subserviencyit leads to; see the race of sycophants it begets.
He could not be overawed by dukes or lords, nor flattered into vertebrate-less subserviency by the patronizing smiles of kings.
The spirit of subserviency to the Old World also died, and the people who had rescued the land made up their minds not only to own it, but to control it.
He no longer had the excuse of his youthful tutelage under Adrian and yet his subserviency to the Inquisition was complete.
Her subserviency to France in separately with her making war on Russia, upon the pretence of the protection of Turkey, was supererogatory as well as needless.
Had the first Napoleon survived to this day, she would hardly have consented to act with the same subserviency to him as she now voluntarily acts toward his ignoble counterfeit.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "subserviency" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: baseness; inferiority; meanness; peonage; serfdom; service; slavery; subordination; subservience