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Discover LudwigThe phrase "abiding insight" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a deep, lasting understanding or awareness of a particular subject or situation.
Example: "Her years of experience in the field have given her an abiding insight into the complexities of human behavior."
Alternatives: "profound understanding" or "lasting awareness."
Exact(1)
Throughout his life Nishida's own practice of philosophy attempted to realize an abiding insight expressed in the various terms he recounts in the Preface cited above.
Similar(58)
Moreover, his account contains inescapable echoes of Summerscale's eloquent insights into our abiding fascination with detectives and detection, particularly when a mystery remains unsolved.
"His original insight of 1967 was an abiding one: that the 1960s were, at bottom, a business," Hagan writes.
Kennedy, joined by the Court's four liberals, met that test with eloquence and insight into, as he wrote, "the abiding connection between marriage and liberty".
Burden is a shy, brilliant, abiding narrator who, even at his loneliest, floods the reader with insight and grace. 5. Seymour, an Introduction by JD Salinger (1963) Salinger's incandescent novella takes loss as its centre and constructs around it a strangely joyful world of memory and devotion.
And as someone with an abiding interest in the world's religions, I hoped to get some insight into what it meant to the Sikh faithful to reach their holy place, especially after what had to be endured to get there.
Poverty is an abiding theme.
That's one abiding memory.
Any insight?
A — An abiding faith.
His abiding passion was Persian poetry.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com