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Depth   /dɛpθ/   Listen
Depth

noun
1.
The extent downward or backward or inward.  Synonym: deepness.  "Depth of a shelf" , "Depth of a closet"
2.
Degree of psychological or intellectual profundity.
3.
(usually plural) the deepest and most remote part.  "Signals received from the depths of space"
4.
(usually plural) a low moral state.
5.
The intellectual ability to penetrate deeply into ideas.  Synonyms: astuteness, deepness, profoundness, profundity.
6.
The attribute or quality of being deep, strong, or intense.  "The depth of his sighs," , "The depth of his emotion"



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"Depth" Quotes from Famous Books



... surrounding the camp with earth-works, and digging around it a deep and wide ditch and planting it in a circle with stakes so that no one can jump over it by reason of its breadth, nor go down into it because of its depth, is found in the warlike operations of Homer (I. ...
— Essays and Miscellanies - The Complete Works Volume 3 • Plutarch

... intellect that, matured by long meditation, and assisted by that absolute freedom from prejudice, which, was the compensatory possession of a man without a country, permitted Sidonia to fathom, as it were by intuition, the depth of questions apparently the most difficult and profound. He possessed the rare faculty of communicating with precision ideas the most abstruse, and in general a power of expression which ...
— Coningsby • Benjamin Disraeli

... upon the depth Of the unspoken; even your loved words Float in the larger meaning of your voice As something dimmer. 1779 GEORGE ...
— Handy Dictionary of Poetical Quotations • Various

... but, possessing very little depth, it strongly resembles a tambourine in shape. Its want of depth is compensated however by its diameter which frequently exceeds three feet. It is covered with moose-skin parchment, painted with rude figures of men and beasts having various ...
— The Journey to the Polar Sea • John Franklin

... wasps just recovering from their winter torpor. On the very tombs themselves there was a lavish adornment of vegetable life: snow-white drifts of hawthorn and honeysuckle wreaths waved on the summits of those on which a sufficient depth of soil had lodged; the wild dog-rose spread its thorny bushes and passionate-coloured crimson blooms as a fence around others; and even on the barest of them nothing could exceed the wealth of orange lichens that redeemed their ...
— Roman Mosaics - Or, Studies in Rome and Its Neighbourhood • Hugh Macmillan


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