Noun
The word is derived from emphasis
of Emphasis
Source: Webster's dictionary[O]n most of the major issues of the last 40 years, what we were told by economists, foreign-policy experts, pundits, and the media has proven wrong - and doubly wrong given the emphases placed on such assertions by the supposedly better-educated professional classes. Victor Davis Hanson
One of the emphases of the new democratic order is no impunity. Yoweri Museveni
Along somewhat different lines, a number of other continental thinkers—still largely influenced by Marxism—put new emphases on structuralism and on a "return to Hegel ". Source: Internet
Distinctive Wesleyan emphases The key emphasis of Wesley's theology relates to how Divine grace operates within the individual. Source: Internet
Wilson, Colin: ibid., p.201 (emphases not added). Source: Internet
Knox, however, modified its use to accord with the doctrinal emphases of the Continental reformers. Source: Internet