prominence造句151. The songs are assembled around the riff, with the guitar solo taking prominence.
152. Mustafa Kemal, as he was formerly known, came to prominence during the First World War as the general who, at Gallipoli, defeated the Allied invasion attempt.
153. The choice of Asian destinations was seen as symbolising the Obama administration's determination to give the region new prominence in American diplomacy .
154. Even after rising to prominence, even after winning the Nobel Peace Prize, Dr. King was vilified by many, denounced as a rabble rouser and an agitator, a communist and a radical.
155. English courses are given prominence to be student-oriented in terms of target setting, teaching process, curriculum evaluation and development of teaching resources, etc.
156. From this atmosphere, great flamelike prominence somitimes extends out into space.
157. Audrey gained immediate prominence in the US with her role in Roman Holiday in 1953.
158. Thoracic scoliotic deformity with prominence should be substantially reduced by the surgical treatment to improve satisfaction rates and self-image regarding back appearance.
159. In the late of the Weijin era, the arrogation of the revenge logic to the law became more and more prominence in the revenge literature theme.
160. While online may be gaining in prominence, Garnier says its not only about online distribution but also ensuring optimal results are achieved across all the channels.
161. Izzard's prominence has increased in the US after roles in TV series The Riches and 2008 thriller Valkyrie - but he admits the country has yet to acknowledge him as a transvestite .
162. In normal times my newfound prominence would almost surely have speeded my departure from government.
163. A solar prominence is a cloud of solar gas held above the Sun's surface by the Sun's magnetic field.
164. This paper first used "technocracy" in March 1933, when a book reviewer bemoaned the "lurid prominence" of the term.
165. Stephen Crane (1871-1900) burst into international literary prominence with The Red Badge of Courage (1895).
166. China has the earliest record of a solar prominence in the world.
167. Temperate forest ecosystems occupy a position of prominence among all ecosystems.
168. His name deserves a prominence in our history second only to that of Aristotle.
169. The city rose to prominence under Pakal, a club-footed king who reigned from 615 to 683 AD, represented by hieroglyphs of sun and shield, he is also referred to as Sun Shield or White Macaw.
170. Before the Civil War, boxing enjoyed a brief vogue in New York, where fighters often associated with the Tammany Hall machine rose to prominence.
171. Second, the region has created city images by giving prominence to local feature and architectural style.
172. Just prior to the Civil War, Inigo Jones, who is regarded as the first significant British architect, came to prominence.
173. Objective To observe the results of Intraoral curved osteotomy for mandibular angle prominence.
174. This undistinguished youth was to explode into a prominence no one had anticipated.
175. is a term used to describe a group of American writers who came to prominence in the 1950s, and the cultural phenomena that they wrote about and inspired (later sometimes called "beatniks").
176. Thoughtway on the Lawmaking of the Byelaw of Medical Accident Management insists on the principles of equality, equity and publicity and gives prominence to the principle of prevention.
177. His chin, too, had the prominence and squareness which mark the man of determination.
178. The energy mechanism that creates a solar prominence is still a topic of research.
179. Although his work was instrumental in bringing the Copernican system into prominence, Galileo was far more than just an astronomer.
180. Whereas patients with extrinsic prominence or varicosity phlebangioma averted harmful operation or biopsy.