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   English
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imminent ['ɪmɪnənt] adj.
gen. سر پر کھڑا   ؛نازل هونے والا   ؛قريب   ؛سر پر لٹکا   ؛قریب
 English thesaurus
imminent ['ɪmɪnənt] adj.
gen. if you say that something is imminent, especially something unpleasant, you mean it is almost certain to happen very soon (There appeared no imminent danger. • They warned that an attack is imminent. collinsdictionary.com)   ؛liable to happen soon; impending (collinsdictionary.com)   ؛likely to occur at any moment; impending (Her death is imminent. collinsdictionary.com)   ؛likely to happen without delay; impending; threatening (said of danger, evil, misfortune: But this isn’ t the first time a world leader constructed a wall between himself and those he deemed imminent threats. collinsdictionary.com)   ؛ready to take place; happening soon (… systems engineers have become rather blasé about the imminent liftoff. • Often used of something bad or dangerous seen as menacingly near: imminent disaster • Like books, board games appear headed for imminent demise at the hands of cathode-ray terminals. merriam-webster.com)   ؛an event that is imminent, especially an unpleasant one, will happen very soon (imminent danger/threat/death/disaster etc : The child was in imminent danger of falling into the water. • With the election imminent, Churchill returned to London. • Reports of negotiations have persisted since the Wall Street Journal reported last month that a buyout was imminent. • That is why the imminent decisions are so vital. • Immediately David Stirling ordered Johnny Cooper to rescue their car from imminent destruction. • The implication was clear: the Fed was trying to ward off an imminent recession. ldoceonline.com)   ؛about to happen (How could the mother have imagined the imminent danger that was closing in on her son? • This alarm will sound if opened by a small child to alert parents of the imminent danger. • Tiles have fallen from the roof of the small chapel and the entrance archway looks in danger of imminent collapse. • The fourth scenario is similar to the third except that the danger is not as imminent. • I will tell you that it did not appear to be a terrorist event and there is no imminent threat. • In the end, is it about imminent threats or about picking fights you can win? • A number of groups are trying to save our lighthouses in the face of this imminent threat. • But the imminent threat of recession was not the economic fundamental he had in mind. • In the new era which Mark believes is dawning, the temple is rejected and its imminent destruction is expected. • These Lutherans were pietist and puritanical, expecting the imminent apocalypse. • A falcon with regard to an expected visitor indicates imminent news or arrival. • The second is messianism, the expectation of imminent transformation of the world. • That leaves the question of how immediate or imminent the threatened violence needs to be. • It was hard to sit in one and not expect the imminent arrival of the drinks trolley. • The imminent use of biological weapons and the threat of millions of deaths is not a laughing matter. • Overall then, there's no sign the payout is in danger, nor any sign of imminent share price fireworks. • As we spoke, the siren of an approaching ambulance warned of the imminent arrival of yet another victim. • The expectation among outsiders oscillates between an imminent rise and an early cut in rates. • An imminent merger means that his colleagues are all threatened with redundancy. • The only difference is that the threat from the former is real and imminent and part of an ongoing development programme. lexico.com)
arch., literal. jutting out or overhanging (collinsdictionary.com)   ؛projecting or leaning forward; overhanging (collinsdictionary.com)   ؛overhanging (hanging or extending outwards over something lexico.com)