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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
prominence
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
sb’s rise to prominence
▪ His rise to prominence would not have been possible without the war.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
given
▪ On the contrary, it is the formal properties of the device which are commonly given prominence.
▪ The speech received much applause, and my remarks about the regalia were given prominence in the next day's papers.
▪ In practice there is increasing evidence that the rights of parents under the Act are not always given prominence.
great
▪ Industry regulators proposed giving this information greater prominence and adding new features.
▪ Balancing the budget was always a fundamental element of the contract, but it assumed greater prominence as the year evolved.
▪ Johnson contradicted this, believing the comparisons would talk both books into greater prominence.
▪ The A.P.R. must always be given greater prominence than any statement relating to any other rate of charge. 6.
▪ Within this array of determining variables, great prominence is accorded to the ratio, the stock of real balances.
▪ With the increasing internationalisation of investment markets this area of our work is likely to expand and acquire even greater prominence.
▪ It is the second role which has recently come into greater prominence.
▪ Blanton was the crucial figure in giving the bass greater prominence.
national
▪ The Windscale site had begun to achieve a bad reputation well before its recent rise to national prominence under a new title.
▪ Like Smith a generation before him, Cohen was vaulted into national prominence.
▪ But it was as a leader of the unemployed that Hannington rose to national prominence.
▪ Of course nobody much resents the Bucks now, since they disappeared from national prominence almost as quickly as they arrived.
▪ That leaves Bush, in Texas, poised to reach national prominence as a Republican advocating a cooler approach to the issue.
▪ He first came to national prominence as a member of the House Judiciary Committee during the Watergate investigation.
▪ Ten years later, Zhou took the first case that would catapult him into national prominence.
new
▪ This has always been a feature of political life, but has assumed new prominence since 1979.
▪ Proceedings around the Biennial this year give a new prominence to performing arts.
political
▪ Parliament and party became increasingly irrelevant, and trade unions and employers' associations came into positions of political prominence.
▪ Aside from its ascendency as an ecumenical center, Hanover was also rising to political prominence.
▪ Mora y Villamil held military and political prominence.
■ VERB
achieve
▪ Kirton first achieved coaching prominence in London and, on his return to New Zealand, eventually took over the Wellington side.
▪ Only lately had experiments with iron sheathing been achieving prominence.
▪ She would not achieve this position of prominence through conquest but through example and inspiration.
assume
▪ This has always been a feature of political life, but has assumed new prominence since 1979.
▪ Balancing the budget was always a fundamental element of the contract, but it assumed greater prominence as the year evolved.
▪ But it would be hazardous to assume that prominence and deviance are simply subjective and objective aspects of the same phenomenon.
▪ The family house itself assumes a special prominence which is unique to this class.
come
▪ It was then that Khomeini first came to prominence.
▪ He came to prominence as a speech writer for President Nixon.
▪ He first came to national prominence as a member of the House Judiciary Committee during the Watergate investigation.
▪ The method came to prominence through the activities of Frederick Bligh Bond, a highly respected authority on medieval church architecture.
▪ An Olympic gold medallist in 1960, Ali came to prominence shortly before his assumption of the world heavyweight title in 1964.
▪ It is the second role which has recently come into greater prominence.
▪ He has, of course, come into recent prominence through a long association with the late Robert Maxwell.
gain
▪ These were the first men of less than fully aristocratic background to gain prominence through their merit.
▪ Bradley, a Hall of Fame pro basketball player, first gained prominence as a college hoops star at Princeton.
▪ The Huskies have gained their prominence partly at the expense of Cal.
give
▪ Perhaps the title of this translation gives it too much prominence.
▪ It is the kind of story that stays news, and that is why it must be given prominence.
▪ Metamorphosen is comparatively prosaic and suffers from a slightly top-heavy balance which gives undue prominence to the leader.
▪ The degree of emphasis given in each religion may vary considerably - some may not give it the prominence which another does.
▪ As a question of aesthetic value, it is hard to dispute Lonsdale's decision to give prominence to this material.
▪ The most developed of these, Meade's scheme for varying social insurance contributions, was given special prominence.
▪ The complexity is natural, given the prominence of media in daily life.
▪ I was determined to give it maximum prominence.
increase
▪ The increasing prominence of licence revenues in the trading account lends an additional degree of scaleability into the revenue model.
rise
▪ Como was defeated, but gradually rose again to prominence.
▪ Aside from its ascendency as an ecumenical center, Hanover was also rising to political prominence.
▪ Though their long history from the early Cambrian to the present different groups of articulate brachiopods rose to prominence only to decline.
▪ Together, they showcase his combustible bop chops and sublime ballad skills, as well as his meteoric rise to prominence.
▪ Wei first rose to prominence during the brief 1978-79 interlude of free speech known as the Democracy Wall movement.
▪ Born into poverty, Jimenez never forgot his origins as he rose to prominence in the church.
▪ But it was as a leader of the unemployed that Hannington rose to national prominence.
▪ She married Jose in 1963 and played an important supporting role as he rose to prominence in the business world.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
shoot to fame/stardom/prominence
▪ In 1929 she shot to stardom on Broadway in a Noel Coward play.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Forbes' long, slow climb back to prominence is associated with two men: its owner and his editor.
▪ Mora y Villamil held military and political prominence.
▪ Only lately had experiments with iron sheathing been achieving prominence.
▪ The prominence of the legislative veto mechanism in our contemporary political system and its importance to Congress can hardly be overstated.
▪ The fourteenth Earl of Home had been marked for prominence since childhood.
▪ The question stylistics must consider is: how are these three concepts of deviance, prominence, and foregrounding interrelated?
▪ This has largely led to a reduction in overall-activity, but the control of mosquitoes by means of insecticide retains its prominence.
▪ This is realized phonologically as a tone group, with the peak of prominence or tonic accent falling on the new element.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Prominence

Prominence \Prom"i*nence\, Prominency \Prom"i*nen*cy\, n. [L. prominentia: cf. F. prominence. See Prominent. ]

  1. The quality or state of being prominent; a standing out from something; conspicuousness.

  2. That which is prominent; a protuberance.

    Solar prominences. (Astron.) See Solar Protuberances, under Protuberance.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
prominence

1590s, "projection," from obsolete French prominence (16c.), from Latin prominentia "a jutting out" (see prominent). Meaning "distinction, conspicuousness" is attested by 1827. As a type of solar phenomenon, from 1862.

Wiktionary
prominence

n. 1 The state of being prominent: widely known or eminent. 2 relative importance. 3 A bulge: something that bulges out or is protuberant or projects from a form. 4 (lb en topography) Autonomous height; relative height or prime factor; a concept used in the categorization of hills and mountains.

WordNet
prominence
  1. n. the state of being prominent: widely known or eminent [ant: obscurity]

  2. relative importance

  3. something that bulges out or is protuberant or projects from a form [syn: bulge, bump, hump, gibbosity, gibbousness, jut, protuberance, protrusion, extrusion, excrescence]

Wikipedia
Prominence (disambiguation)

Prominence may refer to:

  • Celebrity, fame, or notoriety
  • Solar prominence, a phenomenon occurring on the Sun
  • Topographic prominence, a categorization of hills or mountains
  • Maxillary prominence, a facial bone
  • Prominence (phonetics) in linguistic expressions
  • Prominence (2015 video game), a point and click science fiction adventure game.
Prominence (topography)
Prominence (2015 video game)

Prominence is a science fiction point and click adventure game developed by Digital Media Workshop, an independent video game developer located in New York. Gameplay involves puzzle-solving, character arcs, and a story of hope and humanity in the traditions of science fiction stories.

In August 2013 a demo version was released for review. On January 21, 2014, the game was Greenlit on the Steam distribution platform. On July 22, 2015, it was announced that the developers had begun to publish a prologue on the Internet. Each week, a new episodic chapter was published online providing more information about the background of the characters, the game world and the colonizing mission. The full game was released on November 6, 2015.

Usage examples of "prominence".

Antediluvian apostasy was the disregard of the original law of marriage, and the increased prominence of the female sex.

She was not a serving girl, that much was obvious from the richness of her barracan and the cosmetics that highlighted her face, bringing the eyes and rich red mouth into prominence.

Monmouth, turning to the Mayor of Bridgewater, a small, anxious-faced man, who was evidently far from easy at the prominence which his office had brought upon him.

His cricket had frankly been a failure, and the prominence he had gained in his House hardly compensated for the misgivings with which the Chief and Buller regarded his future.

The importance of the nucleus became more and more forcibly impressed upon microscopists, and this body came after a little into such prominence as to hide from view the more familiar protoplasm.

Before the Aryan groups came to prominence, there was a spree of cult violence not widely recognized as millenarian but in fact showing so many signs of the medieval form as to seem a knife-happy parody.

Finally, Karen advanced the solution that Milt should take one of the extension courses that had come into prominence with the peacetime draft and become an officer.

In this instance, given the prominence of the patient in question and the way that prominence was goading the newsies speculations, his emotions went far beyond fury.

In connection with the protectionist agitation, the navigation laws, and their repeal, held an angry prominence.

Church of Rome were to be returned to its old position of prominence, and we were to be recommunicated with the great universe beyond.

Before Steingall uttered another word everyone in the room had a foreboding that they were on the threshold of a discovery which lifted this tragedy into a prominence far beyond aught they had yet dreamed of.

It served not just to keep the girl strapped to the pole but exaggerated the prominence of her breasts by pressing tightly against her rib cage under their swell.

The Judeo-Christian concept of imposed laws of nature, which burst into prominence in seventeenth-century scientific thought, can be traced to the latter part of the thirteenth century, when a new tradition of Christian theology arose, called the theory of voluntarist natural law.

But in 1765, the same year little Abigail was born and Adams found himself chosen surveyor of highways in Braintree, he was swept by events into sudden public prominence.

Inasmuch as most large concerns prosecute both an interstate and a domestic business, while the instrumentalities of interstate commerce and the pecuniary returns from such commerce are ordinarily property within the jurisdiction of some State or other, the task before the Court in drawing the line between the immunity claimed by interstate business on the one hand and the prerogatives claimed by local power on the other has at times involved it in self-contradiction, as successive developments have brought into prominence novel aspects of its complex problem or have altered the perspective in which the interests competing for its protection have appeared.