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The phrase "a profound feeling of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when describing a deep emotional experience or sentiment related to a specific subject or situation.
Example: "After the concert, I was left with a profound feeling of joy and gratitude for the performance."
Alternatives: "a deep sense of" or "an intense emotion of".
Exact(19)
It describes a profound feeling of trying to maintain balance on an emotional and political tightrope.
He was a young man with a profound feeling of age about him.
When they fail they experience a profound feeling of inadequacy and rejection.
You will all co-operate, with a profound feeling of union and brotherhood, for the salvation of the country.
Melancholy may even have a big dash of rebellion about it too, alongside a profound feeling of illumination.
Betts recently visited a prison in Trinidad, which left him with a profound feeling of good fortune.
Similar(41)
Fun is transient; it doesn't leave you with any profound feeling of accomplishment.
But they express a more profound feeling of discontent.
One of the most powerful scenes in the play revolves around a Jewish ritual called the Festival of Regrets, after which Judith expresses her profound feeling of failure over not being able to bring life into the world.
Daily yoga and tai chi sessions with Gingi Lee, a visiting ashtanga teacher, helped, as did the soupy heat, but these alone didn't explain the profound feeling of calm that descended on me from day one.
So why has this profound feeling of peace embraced me each Christmas.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com