Synonym: astuteness, deepness, profoundness, profundity. Similar words: adept, inept, percept, accept, except, septic, keep to, deplete. Meaning: [depθ] n. 1. extent downward or backward or inward 2. degree of psychological or intellectual profundity 3. (usually plural) the deepest and most remote part 4. (usually plural) a low moral state 5. the intellectual ability to penetrate deeply into ideas.
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91 The depth of the pond varies with the rainfall.
92 The depth charge was set for 105.
93 Width, depth and height were crucial decisions.
94 The drawers have a depth of 16 inches.
95 Depth of sleep Many parents say that they think their child wets the bed because of being in such deep sleep.
96 Smith was going for depth this time, and his prominence as a crossover artist made it somewhat of a risk.
97 A tree stands strong not by its fruits or branches, but by the depth of its roots. Anthony Liccione
98 It is just that, for a normally cautious man, I feel dangerously out of my depth in this situation.
99 Some amateur ferreters - professionals too - are defeated by the sheer depth of a system.
100 Set to guitar mode it gave the sound bags of depth while remaining well up front.
101 A bar graph shows present depth and maximum depth reached.
102 They may as well have been a small part of a photograph album gathering dust in the depth of some one's attic.
103 The average depth now is 35 feet, which is too shallow to handle the largest container ships.
104 Overall, the sound lacks the substance and depth demanded in this day and age.
105 It can be of considerable depth and complexity and should not be devalued.
106 Pour hottest tap water into the larger baking pan to a depth of 1 inch.
107 In order to encourage participation, task groups are supported which consider, in depth, various Ada-related aspects.
108 Lurgan are a little concerned about their lack of bowling depth, which could make things tough in the knock-out tournaments.
109 Depth of friendship does not depend on length of acquaintance. Rabindranath Tagore
110 But Schork's relationship with violence and human conflict was much more complicated and had far more depth.
111 The story order is constructed to hold and build the viewership rather than place events in context or explain issues in depth.
112 The depth of the problem is laid bare in the fact that 40% of 18- to 25- year-olds are unemployed.
113 The Belemnite chalk is less dense than the Montagne de Reims and turns sandy towards the bottom of its twenty-metre depth.
114 Their national team will have a little more depth this year.
115 Unfortunately many of the science schemes on the market assume a depth of background knowledge which not all teachers have.
116 Jealousy is not a barometer by which the depth of love can be read,(www.Sentencedict.com) it merely records the degree of the lover's insecurity. Margaret Mead
117 What is so striking though is the breadth and depth of the Bund's response to the situation it faced.
118 Use a combination square to gauge the location and depth of the cutout.
119 They can even recognize depth and may respond with a defensive reaction to approaching objects.
120 The depth of the North-South divide, its precise definition, and directions of change are key issues for this volume.