EMINENT VS. IMMANENT VS. IMMINENT
The words eminent, immanent, and imminent are
among similar sounding words whose uses are often mixed up by writers. This
post will help you distinguish between these terms and learn their proper uses.
The term eminent is used as an adjective to mean “famous
and respected within a particular sphere or profession” or used to emphasize
the presence of a positive quality.
“Eminent KY heart surgeon guilty of health fraud”
The Courier-Journal
The Courier-Journal
“Eminent citizens’ appeal to govt for demonetisation rollback”
Times of India
Times of India
“William Trevor, eminent Irish author of the darkly humorous, dies at 88”
The Washington Post
The Washington Post
There is a known legal term called eminent domain, which
refers to the right of a government to appropriate private property for public
use but with payment of just compensation to the owner.
“Eminent-domain abuse rears its menacing head in Plymouth County”
Boston Globe
Boston Globe
Meanwhile, the term immanent can be used as an adjective
to denote “existing or operating within; inherent.”
“I call religion ‘an immanent transcendence,’ namely a contradiction.”
Religion News Service
Religion News Service
“A creative tension between the immanent and the transcendent needs to be
kept together; not unlike the horizontal of a cross (the historical)
intersecting the vertical (the transcendent).”
Modern Diplomacy
Modern Diplomacy
“Transcendence or Immanence? Balancing Heaven and Earth”
Huffington Post
Huffington Post
On the other hand, the term imminent is used as an
adjective used to describe something that is “about to happen” or “impending.”
“Magnitude 7.4 Earthquake Strikes Fukushima, Japan: Imminent Tsunami
Warning”
Forbes
Forbes
“Venezuela’s Maduro says OPEC output pact ‘imminent'”
Reuters UK
Reuters UK
“Volcanic fumes warn of imminent eruptions”
Science Magazine
Science Magazine
Remember that an eminent person is someone who is esteemed
or renowned, something that is immanent can be found inside or
within while an imminent event is an occurence that is
impending or about to happen.
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