English to Spanish Dictionary profound

profound

profundo
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'
noun
profundidades
adjective
profundo
example
Nicholas's 'profound' handicaps became evident soon after his birth.
Actually this is a very difficult or 'profound' question to answer.
Quantum mechanics is one of the top two most 'profound' ideas in the history of physics.
One of the most 'profound' ideas to emerge from World War Two was the emergence of an international human rights culture and legal system.
There is a 'profound' fear of empowering consumers to share media in a self-organizing way on a mass scale.
Then in 1857 another event took place that was to have the most 'profound' implications.
For me, this book is about the 'profound' idea of a child hoping to navigate death, which is a very complicated, complex part of life.
That's a very 'profound' statement because if you talk to companies today, they say the customer's always right.
This is very difficult as there are many more intelligent people who have had many more 'profound' thoughts on the subject than I have.
Then she was lying in bed at night trying to come to terms with this new and unwelcome emotion: 'profound' sadness.
Pat and his wife, Eva, have a 22-year-old daughter, Lisa, who has a 'profound' disability called Angelman syndrome.
You have someone who was illiterate making 'profound' pronouncements and statements which are amazingly accurate about scientific nature.
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.
Therefore there is time to think deep, 'profound' thoughts.
Chief Seattle's reply has been described as the most beautiful and 'profound' statement on the environment ever made.
Surgery also may be an option for some children with severe to 'profound' sensorineural hearing loss.
The fact is that the absence of a parent has a very 'profound' effect.
I think it has quite 'profound' implications for us as human beings.
Most of the increased risk of infection is confined to those with liver cirrhosis, suppressed immune systems, or 'profound' neutropenia.
The stunning absence of the normally expected response was dramatic and perhaps the most 'profound' statement of the series.
The patient also may have 'profound' malaise, severe headaches, myalgias, and vague abdominal pain.
Without realizing it, he made a very 'profound' statement.
Muscular dystrophies are genetic disorders, usually progressive, which can lead to 'profound' paralysis.
Patients who are symptomatic can experience very high fever, rigors, 'profound' hypotension, and often complain of nausea with or without diarrhea.
It's a very 'profound' statement for a lad of 21, but he's right.
Other projects could have a much more 'profound' impact on the intellectual property landscape.
The workshop left me in a 'profound' state of wonder at the subtlety and simplicity of this healing approach.
It is a 'profound' statement about political integration and it will establish the EU as a legal entity in its own right.
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.
A prolonged admission is likely to result in 'profound' weakness and physical disability.
Credits: Google Translate
Download the
HelloEnglishApp
image_one