English to Urdu Dictionary profound

profound

گہرا
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.
example
The patient also may have 'profound' malaise, severe headaches, myalgias, and vague abdominal pain.
Therefore there is time to think deep, 'profound' thoughts.
Grace had wonderful stories, but they always left her with a 'profound' sadness.
Then I realised I wouldn't have any 'profound' thoughts.
He suffered permanent brain damage and 'profound' disability.
The fact is that the absence of a parent has a very 'profound' effect.
Vincent's disability is so 'profound' he can't speak, has no use of his limbs, is not toilet trained and sleeps in a cot.
This is very difficult as there are many more intelligent people who have had many more 'profound' thoughts on the subject than I have.
St Mary of the Angels caters for clients with moderate, severe and 'profound' intellectual disabilities.
Pat and his wife, Eva, have a 22-year-old daughter, Lisa, who has a 'profound' disability called Angelman syndrome.
There are variations on these themes, but none that yields any 'profound' insights.
The stunning absence of the normally expected response was dramatic and perhaps the most 'profound' statement of the series.
Here I am, trying to be all serious, and she is laughing at my 'profound' idea.
It is a 'profound' statement about political integration and it will establish the EU as a legal entity in its own right.
Touching case studies demonstrate these 'profound' truths.
Most of the increased risk of infection is confined to those with liver cirrhosis, suppressed immune systems, or 'profound' neutropenia.
Beyond these changes are two others, which may be equally 'profound' in their implications.
The answer must be no, but again the impression of 'profound' thought and relentless sifting of the ideas can only inspire respect.
Such films can never have a 'profound' influence on the viewers, he says.
I choose to interpret this not as a ‘marketing tip,’ but as a 'profound' statement.
I think it has quite 'profound' implications for us as human beings.
I was very humbled that this man could make such a 'profound' statement.
Severe toxicity leads to coma, 'profound' hypotension, bradycardia, and asystolic arrest.
The 'profound' person understands what is moral.
That's a very 'profound' statement because if you talk to companies today, they say the customer's always right.
The most 'profound' influence of archetypes is in their regulation of the human life cycle.
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.
His 'profound' ideas led him to some conclusions that strike the modern reader as bizarre, even absurd.
These are very 'profound' issues that we're dealing with, whether it's security of Australia or violence in indigenous communities.
The deformity may be so severe, the fractures so numerous, and the disability so 'profound' , however, that almost any form of treatment deserves consideration.
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