profundity
21profundity — pro·fun·di·ty …
22profundity — pro•fun•di•ty [[t]prəˈfʌn dɪ ti[/t]] n. pl. ties 1) the quality or state of being profound; depth 2) Usu., profundities. profound or deep matters 3) a profoundly deep place; abyss • Etymology: 1375–1425; late ME profundite < LL profunditās.… …
23profundity — /prəˈfʌndəti/ (say pruh funduhtee) noun (plural profundities) 1. quality of being profound; depth. 2. a profoundly deep place; an abyss. 3. (plural) profound or deep matters. {Middle English profundite, from Late Latin profunditas} …
24polysyllabic profundity — index bombast Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
25-ties — Profundity Pro*fun di*ty, n.; pl. { ties}. [L. profunditas: cf. F. profondite. See {Profound}.] The quality or state of being profound; depth of place, knowledge, feeling, etc. The vast profundity obscure. Milton. [1913 Webster] …
26depth of one's feelings — profundity and sincerity of one s emotions …
27profoundness — noun 1. extremeness of degree the profoundness of his ignorance • Derivationally related forms: ↑profound • Hypernyms: ↑ultimacy, ↑ultimateness 2. the intellectual ability to penetrate deeply into ideas • Syn: ↑ …
28deepness — noun 1. the intellectual ability to penetrate deeply into ideas • Syn: ↑astuteness, ↑profundity, ↑profoundness, ↑depth • Derivationally related forms: ↑deep, ↑profound (for: ↑ …
29KABBALAH — This entry is arranged according to the following outline: introduction general notes terms used for kabbalah the historical development of the kabbalah the early beginnings of mysticism and esotericism apocalyptic esotericism and merkabah… …
30depth — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Deepness Nouns 1. depth; deepness, profundity; deepening, lowering (see depression). See lowness. 2. depression, concavity;shaft, well; bowels of the earth, bottomless pit; hell; valley; abyss, chasm… …