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Definitions

subserve

[suhb-surv] / səbˈsɜrv /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

These auditory and reward network pathways likely subserve the mind’s ability to form predictions and expectations during music listening.

From Scientific American • Sep. 18, 2021

Resting-state fMRI has shown that brain networks that subserve motor and even cognitive functions like language, memory and emotion are continuously and dynamically active in the resting brain.

From Scientific American • Aug. 7, 2017

In a paper published in The Lancet in February 1916, he posited a “physical or chemical change and a break in the links of the chain of neurons which subserve a particular function.”

From New York Times • Jun. 10, 2016

Some years before, Artist Robinson had concluded that the only excuse for painting was to subserve architecture and had applied himself to that problem.

From Time Magazine Archive

It is an attribute which, if relied on too exclusively as a leavening force, is readily made to subserve very ordinary purposes.

From Search-Light Letters by Grant, Robert