subject to control

  • 51control — v 1. dominate, rule over, reign over, exercise control over, govern; command, order, dictate, have it all one s way, call the shots, call the plays, run the show; boss, lay down the law, hold the purse strings; be in control, be in the driver s… …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 52control — 1. Authority that may be less than full command exercised by a commander over part of the activities of subordinate or other organizations. 2. In mapping, charting, and photogrammetry, a collective term for a system of marks or objects on the… …

    Military dictionary

  • 53subject — I. v. a. 1. Subdue, control, bring under rule, make submissive, make subordinate. 2. Enslave, enthrall. 3. Expose, make liable. 4. Submit, refer, make accountable. 5. Make subservient. 6. Cause to undergo. II. a …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 54control verb — noun A verb which takes multiple arguments, one of which is another verb, such that one of the control verbs arguments (possibly its subject) is semantically both an argument of the control verb and an argument of the other verb …

    Wiktionary

  • 55control — 1. verb /kənˈt(ʃ)roʊl,kənˈtrəʊl/ To exercise influence over, to suggest or dictate the behavior of, oversit. With a simple remote, he could control the toy truck. See Also: regulate 2. noun /kənˈt(ʃ)roʊl,kənˈtrəʊl/ …

    Wiktionary

  • 56Control — 1. The use of power to influence an outcome. For example, working control is the ability of a minority shareholder to influence corporate decision making when there is no dominant majority shareholder. 2. A restriction used to prevent a specified …

    Investment dictionary

  • 57subject — [14] To subject something is etymologically to ‘throw it under’. The verb comes via Old French subjecter from Latin sujectāre, which was formed from subjectus, the past participle of Latin subicere ‘bring down’. This in turn was a compound verb… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 58subject — [14] To subject something is etymologically to ‘throw it under’. The verb comes via Old French subjecter from Latin sujectāre, which was formed from subjectus, the past participle of Latin subicere ‘bring down’. This in turn was a compound verb… …

    Word origins

  • 59subject-control — adjective whose shared object is its subject …

    Wiktionary

  • 60control person — In securities law, a person who has actual power or influence over an issuer. Kersh v. General Council of Assemblies of God, C.A.Cal., 804 F.2d 546, 548. One who formulates and directs corporate policy or who is deeply involved in the important… …

    Black's law dictionary