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Discover LudwigThe phrase "an imminence" is correct and usable in written English
It can be used to refer to a state of being imminent or something that is about to happen. Example: "There was an imminence of change in the air as the deadline approached."
Exact(2)
There's an imminence about his acting".
When you must conjure up a war zone, an interrogation room or an imminence of terror in 10 minutes, it concentrates the mind, makes every chatty exchange seethe with menace, every vacuous pleasantry freighted with unspoken predation.
Similar(58)
Here, Allen, the overreacher, finds a way of expressing "that almost something" — a Romantic imminence of perfection, harmony, and transcendent grace.
Many studies showed that the erythrocyte participation in nitric oxide-dependent vasodilation improves tissue perfusions and decreases blood viscosity; this gives a new imminence for pathophysiology of blood viscosity disorders [ 44, 45].
A sense of awful imminence, a monstrous awe gripped him.
He paused, and a sense of awful imminence, a monstrous awe, gripped him.
Mr. Dayan's assessment seems to buttress the theory that the collective saber rattling is part of a campaign to pressure the Obama administration and the international community, rather than an indication of the imminence of an Israeli strike.
Specifically, the legalisation of torturing the guilty faces the problem of imminence; unlike killing in self-defence it almost never involves an imminent threat.
Celebrating the transcendent powers of art, it creates a sense of imminence, but also registers a feeling of frustration".
From his own observations, he learned many subtle and intimate things about grasses, plants, forest animals, water, clouds, stars, and planets; I myself noticed that, even after his capture, and under a foreign sky, he could feel the approach of a gale or the imminence of a snowstorm many hours before it actually arrived.
Perhaps, an increase in imminence, impact and workload of subtests may influence students' performance and study behaviour more than the cumulative assessment program.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com