Immanent [adjective]

Definition of Immanent:

native

Synonyms of Immanent:


Opposite/Antonyms of Immanent:

-


Sentence/Example of Immanent:

And yet there was a likeness, not so much speaking as immanent, not so much in any particular feature as upon the whole.

Through its immanent psychical power it is to exercise magical coercion over the soul of the god or the saint.

The development, moreover, is not immanent in religion; it is the result of external causes.

This entire social complex has been subsumed under the principle that law is immanent in all history.

The spiritual life is thus individual and over-individual, historical and over-historical, transcendent and immanent.

Even the meaning of the reality itself, from its immanent side, is something quite other than the natural life and its contents.

But this immanent aspect of the idea of God is accompanied by a transcendent aspect.

With Shakespeare, for example, imagination seems immanent in his very consciousness; with Milton, in his memory.

He is a part of and like unto his kind, his spirit immanent in his race.

That God is immanent in His world, so that He works as truly "from within" as "from above."