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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.

Blackness in abstraction, as the curator Adrienne Edwards has written, is a more capacious and immanent model of artistic creation than many of our institutions can handle.

From New York Times • Sep. 28, 2022

God, however defined or understood, is immanent in all things, which is why we must look so directly at the world, even when the world indicts us for being terrible tenants.

From Washington Post • Jun. 27, 2022

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 • Jul. 7, 2021

Many live together in agricultural cooperatives, where they prepare for the immanent apocalypse that, they believe, will restore the communal agrarian society of the Inca empire.

From Salon • Feb. 23, 2020

The eminent Archbishop Latour, knowing that his death was imminent, felt God was immanent.

From "Woe Is I" by Patricia T. O'Conner