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Definitions

immanent

[im-uh-nuhnt] / ˈɪm ə nənt /
ADJECTIVE
native
Synonyms


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.

And not only the real — after all, even the basest trivialities are real — but the omnipresent, the immanent and the imminent, the stuff of being and nonbeing.

From Los Angeles Times

But a trace of this trauma seems immanent in the tender paintings and colored-pencil drawings he made of life on the psychiatric ward of a Veterans Affairs hospital in Montrose, N.Y.

From New York Times

A cloud of these overlapping vertical marks, some long and jagged, some slightly curved, in an untitled off-white painting from 1970 offers a mystical vision of divinity immanent in all the world’s separate beings.

From New York Times

His emotional intensity is built up from the gestures and proportions of the body, from the psychology immanent in posture and the position of his limbs, hands, feet and even toes.

From Washington Post

“They are in it for the long haul and try not to say things that sound too alarming. But they live an immanent theocratic vision.”

From Salon