[ UK /ɪmˈɛnsɪti/ ]
NOUN
  1. unusual largeness in size or extent or number
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How To Use immensity In A Sentence

  • I crawled to the lip and looked, watching the abyss take on immensity in the growing light and trembling from the fear of height that was upon me. SHIN-BONES
  • Little else had been done to harmonize or soften the concrete's grey immensity.
  • The credit of the country would not have suffered by the additional issuance of some final $60,000,000 (?) of silver certificates if the gold in the Treasury had concurrently been upbuilt to the extent of $50,000,000 to $100,000,000; but an immensity of business loss would have been averted. A Brief History of Panics and Their Periodical Occurrence in the United States
  • I actually intended “enormity” in this post to evoke primarily a sense of size and then to also take advantage of the secondary meaning to suggest that the proscription is bad; it’s easier to replace the word with “immensity” than with “wickedness” in my sentence. Prescriptivists amaze me (to) no end « Motivated Grammar
  • Living on her starboard side with the decks at about 35, its imposing immensity is magnified by the metallic reverberations in the ocean.
  • Slowly Perdita was trying to absorb the immensity of the pampas.
  • And from that position a Christian, Jew, Muslim and Buddhist will all see the same immensity.
  • Quote from the story: It was red and dripping; an immensity of pulsing, moving jelly; a scarlet blob with myriad tentacular trunks that waved and waved. "The Body Snatchers" and other Alien Pods
  • His answer, such as it is, reveals little if any grasp of the immensity of the problem.
  • And from that position a Christian, Jew, Muslim and Buddhist will all see the same immensity.
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