Prominent in a sentence as an adjective

The transitions don't have to be prominent though, at least from the studies we did.

Not in comments, buried in random threads, but in somewhere prominent on the site.

"The gentleman passed away a few years ago and, sure enough, that was quite prominent in his obituary.

GitHub is large enough and prominent enough where it should have an entire bounty program, let alone giving a blogger a link.

I wouldn't fault anyone for having pre-conceived notions about the cultures prominent at these companies, would you?

Bank of America was the most prominent actor in this regard; but now, even they have stopped offering money transfer service.

When it first started out there was a lot more technology discussion, but quickly the whole VC/fundraising aspect became very prominent.

Dr. Bose had been awarded a plaque at the national ASA conference in the summer of 2011, but he wasn't well enough to travel to accept the reward, so we volunteered to host a reception in Cambridge to give him the award and recognize other prominent acousticians.

I've helped to organize large conferences in the past, and right now I'm organizing a reception to honor some prominent Boston-area acousticians.

Do we really want a counterpart agenda now setting rules for who can be a founder, who can be an investor, who can be a director, who can be a CEO, or who can otherwise take a prominent role in the startup world?

"Using the Economist house style offers an elegant alternative, wherein virtually all people and organizations are identified explicitly, no matter how prominent.

During that entire time, her article stood with a very prominent notice saying it was going to be deleted, with a prominent link allowing people to argue in favor of keeping or, better yet, locate a real reliable source backing up any claim to her notability.

It may give us a voyeuristic fascination on something that is depicted as an internal intrigue within a prominent up-and-coming startup but this is fundamentally company confidential information that is not capable of being aired publicly without significant distortion.

That they're being asked to follow those rules is hardly government bullying - in the eyes of most everyone here that definitely counts as "consumer protection".It doesn't get better when they start spouting complete lies - the gibberish about certain unmarked taxi like services being exclusive to "royal families or prominent business leaders".

Prominent definitions

adjective

having a quality that thrusts itself into attention; "an outstanding fact of our time is that nations poisoned by anti semitism proved less fortunate in regard to their own freedom"; "a new theory is the most prominent feature of the book"; "salient traits"; "a spectacular rise in prices"; "a striking thing about Picadilly Circus is the statue of Eros in the center"; "a striking resemblance between parent and child"

See also: outstanding salient spectacular striking

adjective

conspicuous in position or importance; "a big figure in the movement"; "big man on campus"; "he's very large in financial circles"; "a prominent citizen"

See also: large