Definition of immanentnext

Example Sentences

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of immanent Yet this tenuous compromise had already fractured due to other immanent factors, well before the recent targeting of artists and bohemians with a full-frontal assault mounted with the instruments of the fascist and protofascist regimes of long ago. Diedrich Diederichsen, Artforum, 1 Dec. 2025 Repatriation, while an immanent and continuous process, is often relegated to secondary status by state actors that prioritize state building, stabilization, early recovery, and reconstruction. Jesse Marks, Foreign Affairs, 11 Feb. 2025 Silently, austerely, his work seemed to prophesy a future state in which photography would colonize the immanent world and illusions overtake reality. Washington Post, 31 Aug. 2023 Since then, the opera house – though in so many places the art form is dismissed as an elitist art form with little relevance to today’s challenges and mindsets – has emerged as an immanent pole of strength, support, and solace for a city living under the clouds of war and aggression. Howard Lafranchi, The Christian Science Monitor, 10 July 2023 But Pynchon’s theory of history offers its own immanent critique. John Semley, WIRED, 16 Feb. 2023 But the experience of becoming a parent, as Nabokov describes it in Speak, Memory, suggests a third possibility—one which, if interpreted correctly, is possible to verify empirically: that death and rebirth are immanent in life itself. Ryan Ruby, Harper’s Magazine , 26 Oct. 2022 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. Jason Farago, New York Times, 28 Sep. 2022
Recent Examples of Synonyms for immanent
Adjective
  • Preborn children are human beings with inherent rights, dignity and worth that no contract should supersede.
    Kimberly Bird, The Orlando Sentinel, 17 May 2026
  • All three of those reasons for CEO terminations describe leaders who couldn't commit, make tough calls, or grapple with the ambiguity inherent in most executive decisions.
    Mark Murphy, Forbes.com, 17 May 2026
Adjective
  • The price-to-book ratio remains a reasonable proxy for gauging Berkshire’s intrinsic value.
    Bill Stone, Forbes.com, 10 May 2026
  • Why does empty space still have a non-zero amount of energy — dark energy, or a cosmological constant — intrinsic to it?
    Big Think, Big Think, 7 May 2026
Adjective
  • The question weighed heavily at Tortoise’s live shows over the past year, during which his integral contribution to the Chicago instrumental legends’ heady sound was often missed.
    Dave Segal, SPIN, 15 May 2026
  • Farming is still integral to daily life, and the festival honors this tropical fruit and like longtime growers like Lady Di, who has been cultivating pineapples since 1974.
    Taryn White, Forbes.com, 15 May 2026
Adjective
  • Jumping from one idea to another, from one flavor of the month to the next, there seems to be no clarity, consistency or essential golden thread to Harry and Meghan’s work, although Meghan, known as the 24-carat master rebrander, is continuously rebranding herself.
    Stephanie Nolasco , Ashley Papa, FOXNews.com, 19 May 2026
  • Border plants play an essential role in unifying gardens.
    Kim Toscano, Southern Living, 19 May 2026

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Cite this Entry

“Immanent.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/immanent. Accessed 20 May. 2026.

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