English edit

Etymology edit

From omni- +‎ Latin subiugāns.

Adjective edit

omnisubjugant (comparative more omnisubjugant, superlative most omnisubjugant)

  1. (rare) Subjugating all others. [from 20th c.]
    • 1911, Max Beerbohm, Zuleika Dobson:
      But would she ever meet whom, looking up to him, she could love—she, the omnisubjugant?
    • 1957, Peter Fleming, Operation Sea Lion, Tauris Parke, published 2011, page 83:
      Fantastic though the situation was, there were no grounds for hoping that the omnisubjugant German armies across the Channel would prove to be some kind of an hallucination []
    • 1978, Natalie Gittelson, Dominus: A Woman Looks at Men's Lives[1], Farrar, Straus and Giroux, →ISBN:
      But if to be omnisubjugant, all-controlling, was the neo-feminist dream, so far, it was largely lily-white.