Crossword-Solution: IMMINENCE
Dictionary
| Word | Word Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Imminence | n. | The condition or quality of being imminent; a threatening, as of something about to happen. The imminence of any danger or distress. |
| Imminence | n. | That which is imminent; impending evil or danger. |
We have 6 clues for the answer “IMMINENCE”
| Clue | Answers |
|---|---|
| the state of being imminent and liable to happen soon | 1 answer |
| the state of impending; also, that which impends | 2 answers |
| Impending danger. | 4 answers |
| nearness | 15 answers |
| ADVENT ___ | 26 answers |
| future state | 33 answers |
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Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
AEETR
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
15 +1
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Sentences with IMMINENCE (5)
Every drop of blood seemed to freeze in her veins; not even during the moments of her wildest anguish in England had she so completely realised the imminence of the peril in which her husband stood.
Americans viewed the war as the last war--the war which would make the world "safe for democracy." The Afro-American community remained oblivious to the hostilities in Europe and was late in becoming aware of the imminence of war.
Quick—something must be done! done in a flash, too! But the very imminence of the emergency paralyzed his invention.
Osterman bewildered him with his volubility, the lightning rapidity with which he leaped from one subject to another, garrulous, witty, flamboyant, terrifying the old man with pictures of the swift approach of ruin, the imminence of danger.
That he was more or less distinctly aware of the imminence of the blow we may gather from the tenor of some of his letters written in these weeks.
Quotes with IMMINENCE (3)
[Wither] knew that everything was lost. It is incredible how little this knowledge moved him. What had been in his far-off youth a merely aesthetic repugnance to realities that were crude or vulgar, had deepened and darkened, year after year, into a fixed refusal of everything that was in any degree other than himself. He had passed from Hegel into Hume, thence through Pragmatism, and thence through logical Positivism, and out at last into the complete void. The indicative mo…
I sit in meditation…and soon all sounds, and all one sees and feels, take on imminence, an immanence, as if the Universe were coming to attention, a Universe of which one is the center, a Universe that is not the same yet not different from oneself: within man as within mountains there are many parts of hydrogen and oxygen, of calcium, phosphorus, potassium, and other elements. ‘You never enjoy the world aright, till the Sea itself flows in your veins, till you are clothed wi…
Encased in an elaborate illusion of unlimited power and progress, each of us subscribes, at least until one's midlife crisis, to the belief that existence consists of an eternal, upward spiral of achievement, dependent on will alone. This comforting illusion may be shattered by some urgent irreversible experience ... None more potently confronts us with finiteness and contingency than the imminence of our own death.
Where this answer appears
Appears in: NYT.
Used 1 time in crossword archives (1953).