Commanding in a sentence as an adjective

+/- 10% or so isn't going to cut it when they are commanding a huge chunk of the parts cost.

And they took that commanding lead and had their lunch eaten overnight by iPhone and Android.

These were tasks that were set by the commanding officers and needed to be performed flawlessly.

We have Fleet Commanders who don't hold political power, but are in charge of commanding fleet engagements and organizing defenses/raids.

Software developers seem to have problems with this, maybe because we spend so much time commanding machines to do things with brief statements without the even the least bit of a please or thank you.

The encryption stops someone from commanding the spacecraft, the timestamp stops someone from recording a transmission and resending it later.

Most of the ships and ship mockups I've seen had a lot of work to avoid randomly hitting switches, it would not do to have an atmospheric bump cause you to make some mistake in commanding it.

Now that Android is commanding significant market share, I think Android development will begin to be seen to be as important as iOS development.

The DigitalRiver family of companies, which have a commanding presence in shareware payments, will get you your money on average about 45 days after the sale takes place.

[6] Captain Richard Rushton, commanding officer of Yorktown at the time of the incident, also denied that the ship had to be towed back to port, stating that the ship returned under its own power.

In one other deliberate departure from full redundancy, pictures from the descent imager were split up, with each channel carrying 350 pictures.>As it turned out, Cassini never listened to channel A because of an operational commanding error.

Th US currently has no statute prohibiting "encrypted-hosting service designs [without] a backdoor for the government and the service provider", nor is there any statute commanding individual 'A' to enable the government to cryptographically impersonate 'A' online to deceive 'B'.

Commanding definitions

adjective

used of a height or viewpoint; "a commanding view of the ocean"; "looked up at the castle dominating the countryside"; "the balcony overlooking the ballroom"

See also: dominating overlooking