profound
definition from
Oxford Dictionary of English -
profound /prəˈfaʊnd /
▸ adjective
(profounder, profoundest)
1 (of a state, quality, or emotion) very great or intense:
profound feelings of disquiet
the implications of this discovery are profound.
(of a disease or disability) very severe:
a case of profound liver failure.
2 (of a person or statement) having or showing great knowledge or insight:
a profound philosopher.
(of a subject or idea) demanding deep study or thought:
expressing profound truths in simple language.
3 archaic very deep:
profound crevasses.
▸ noun (the profound) literary the deepest part of something, especially the ocean:
nor billowy surge disturbs the vast profound.
profound quality:
her work is an often eerie mix of the banal and the profound.
– DERIVATIVES
profoundness /prəˈfaʊndnəs / noun
– ORIGIN Middle English : from Old French profund, from Latin profundus ‘deep’, from Latin pro ‘before’ + fundus ‘bottom’. The word was used earliest in the sense ‘showing deep insight’.
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