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immanence

[ im-uh-nuhns ]

noun

  1. the state of being inherent or exclusively existing within something:

    “Place” is a fundamental concept; it has evaded theorizing because of its immanence and omnipresence.

  2. Theology. the state or quality of a Deity exclusively existing within the universe, time, etc.:

    A horizontal axis stretches from God’s immanence in the world, on the left, to transcendence of it, on the right.



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Other Words From

  • non·im·ma·nence noun
  • non·im·ma·nen·cy noun
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Word History and Origins

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Compare Meanings

How does immanence compare to similar and commonly confused words? Explore the most common comparisons:

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Example Sentences

How, as a painter, do you convey such an acute awareness of life’s mysterious immanence, even in moments of transition?

The word that comes to mind is immanence – a term I learned as a philosophy undergraduate and which I did not remotely understand until I began to have these experiences of being alone in nature.

Joyce’s presence in this city is already radically overdetermined, overbearing in its intimacy and immanence.

This must have been the type of experience sought by Jesus during 40 days of wandering and fasting in the desert: a sense of God’s immanence, which only seems revealed in the absence of distraction.

Ideas of immanence, the nostalgia of the body.

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