English to Urdu Dictionary subservient

subservient

مسخر
definition
adjective
she was subservient to her parents
prepared to obey others unquestioningly.
example
The way the Secretary of State is conducting his foreign policy, there is no doubt left that all the policy decisions are right now 'subservient' to the need of capturing the terrorist.
In their case everything is 'subservient' to the economy.
There is a need to look within because, in countries across the world, religion has become 'subservient' to local tradition and women have been victimised in a patriarchal society.
Pearson spoke about how working women carry the puzzle of family life in their heads, their list of never-ending tasks and how their modest desire for time to themselves becomes 'subservient' to everyone else's needs.
Even in the United States, where the private media are almost invariably 'subservient' to corporate interests, journalists generally do not cite polls by pollsters who have publicly partisan connections.
This is an insider economy, where the entire economy is 'subservient' to the interests of a chosen few and their cronies.
She said: ‘We are determined to reach our goal - to empower women to live their own lives and not be 'subservient' to their husbands.’
He is a hardcore Libertarian who wishes nothing more than to reduce the working class to an endentured slave class, 'subservient' to the will of Corporate Fascism.
In other words, democracy must be 'subservient' to economic growth, and unchecked government power is good for us.
They are worshipers of the culture of death, whose goal is one thing: to convert the world to their religion, thereby making everyone in the world 'subservient' to them, to their ideals, to their power.
The unit's public affairs officers are 'subservient' to the information operations experts, military and defense officials said.
By handling this case involving a head of state, the Korean judiciary will become either truly independent from political pressure or 'subservient' to its power.
She is meek and 'subservient' to the needs of her God.
All they want to hear is that the arts are efficiently run, good for the economy and 'subservient' to current dogmas of inclusivism and education.
Was there some hidden agenda to keep all us colonial subjects docile and 'subservient' to the Great Empire by brainwashing our smarter students?
Once defeated, the Zulu king became 'subservient' to British rule and lost control over the trade in the kingdom, including the trade in beads.
When Kennedy ran for president in 1960 he went to great lengths to deny that his religious beliefs would make him 'subservient' to the Catholic church and not the U.S. constitution.
Few things are harder for people who were traditionally 'subservient' to their ‘elders and betters’ than publicly dissenting and struggling for rights.
Nigerian women are very 'subservient' to their men, so the project encourages personal development so that the women can become more assertive in deciding on a better life for themselves and their families.
Meanwhile, Richard explained, ‘the archbishops of York didn't want to be 'subservient' to the Archbishop of Canterbury’.
There is good reason for this: Marx elucidated a theory of labor in which workers become 'subservient' to the objects they produce, a theory where people are not exalted by their labor, but devalued by it.
This case, the idea that the United States judicial system would be 'subservient' or subordinate to an International Court of Justice, or the world court, is mined-boggling.
While accountants take confidentiality seriously, as a core value it is 'subservient' to their attestation role.
We can ‘speak’ health and wealth into being because ‘the material world is 'subservient' to the spiritual one’.
The UK government should not become 'subservient' to an all-powerful Frankfurt, just like local government has little power in the UK at the moment.
For much of the twentieth century, mandarins of the law viewed the courts as agents of social change and the law as contingent, evolutionary, and ultimately 'subservient' to political expediency.
Representatives who have been so nominated by their leaders, once elected to office as parliamentarians and councillors, become 'subservient' to these leaders.
A form of marriage very popular among some groups then and now is the patriarchal, where the wife is 'subservient' to the husband.
The piano does play a more 'subservient' role in the Rachmaninoff, as the cello carries the bulk of the melodic development, but Kay provides solid support throughout.
If nothing else, this administration provides some space for the emergence of a post-civil rights black leadership not 'subservient' to the Democratic Party.
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