English to Arabic Dictionary profound

profound

عميق
definition
noun
the vast depth of the ocean or of the mind.
adjective
profound social changes
(of a state, quality, or emotion) very great or intense.
a profound philosopher
(of a person or statement) having or showing great knowledge or insight.
translation of 'profound'
adjective
عميق,
عويص,
متعمق
example
The answer by one student was so 'profound' that the professor shared it with colleagues, via the Internet, which is, of course, why we now have the pleasure of enjoying it as well.
Thus, differences in size have potentially 'profound' implications for the ecology and fitness of large and small animals.
There is also on-campus housing for children with multiple and 'profound' disabilities who require a high level of support.
Here I am, trying to be all serious, and she is laughing at my 'profound' idea.
Then she was lying in bed at night trying to come to terms with this new and unwelcome emotion: 'profound' sadness.
The fact is that the absence of a parent has a very 'profound' effect.
The deformity may be so severe, the fractures so numerous, and the disability so 'profound' , however, that almost any form of treatment deserves consideration.
Over the long term, they will make a far more 'profound' impact.
Such films can never have a 'profound' influence on the viewers, he says.
Socrates raised 'profound' questions in philosophy in a city square, and many of our liberation heroes took their majors in prison yards.
The answer must be no, but again the impression of 'profound' thought and relentless sifting of the ideas can only inspire respect.
Therefore there is time to think deep, 'profound' thoughts.
It was not only onstage that 'profound' emotions stirred under a cool, unruffled surface.
The separation is so 'profound' that there is no real basis for argument.
Patients who are symptomatic can experience very high fever, rigors, 'profound' hypotension, and often complain of nausea with or without diarrhea.
Pat and his wife, Eva, have a 22-year-old daughter, Lisa, who has a 'profound' disability called Angelman syndrome.
Appearing on the second tablet, laws six through ten can be understood as teaching a 'profound' idea if we study them in reverse order, from bottom to top.
They are the treatment of choice for many with severe to 'profound' sensorineural hearing loss.
You have someone who was illiterate making 'profound' pronouncements and statements which are amazingly accurate about scientific nature.
There are about 123,000 people over 16 who were born hearing but have developed severe or 'profound' deafness.
The workshop left me in a 'profound' state of wonder at the subtlety and simplicity of this healing approach.
His 'profound' ideas led him to some conclusions that strike the modern reader as bizarre, even absurd.
This short paragraph does not even scratch the surface of a book that has many novel insights and 'profound' ideas, and which opens up numerous lines for further inquiry.
There are variations on these themes, but none that yields any 'profound' insights.
Most of the increased risk of infection is confined to those with liver cirrhosis, suppressed immune systems, or 'profound' neutropenia.
It is a short book, written in one unbroken paragraph, but it explores 'profound' ideas about individual responsibility, language and reality, and the nature of fiction.
For these women and for hundreds of other men and women who have experienced tremendous loss, the past year has piled myriad emotions on top of 'profound' sadness.
The patient also may have 'profound' malaise, severe headaches, myalgias, and vague abdominal pain.
As a medium to express 'profound' ideas, it's secondary to a novel.
He developed exchange transfusion for the management of pregnant women with 'profound' anaemia and cardiac failure.
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