安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
|
- PERMANENCE Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of PERMANENCE is the quality or state of being permanent : durability
- PERMANENCE | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
PERMANENCE definition: 1 staying the same or continuing for a long time: 2 staying the same or continuing for a long… Learn more
- Permanence - Definition, Meaning Synonyms - Vocabulary. com
Permanence is when something sticks around forever, like your mother's love or the smell of smoke after you accidentally start a fire in your kitchen
- PERMANENCE Definition Meaning - Dictionary. com
Permanence definition: the condition or quality of being permanent; perpetual or continued existence See examples of PERMANENCE used in a sentence
- Permanence - definition of permanence by The Free Dictionary
Define permanence permanence synonyms, permanence pronunciation, permanence translation, English dictionary definition of permanence n The quality or condition of being permanent; permanency
- permanence noun - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes . . .
Definition of permanence noun from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary the state of lasting for a long time or for all time in the future The spoken word is immediate but lacks permanence We no longer talk of the permanence of marriage
- permanence - definition and meaning - Wordnik
noun The character or property of being permanent or enduring; durability; fixedness; continuance in the same state, condition, place, or office; the state of being lasting, fixed, unchanging or unchangeable in character, condition, position, office, or the like; freedom from liability to change; as, the permanence of a government or state; the
- PERMANENCE definition in American English - Collins Online Dictionary
There used to be a permanence that was so isolating Could this be the moment to invest in a new permanence? You can feel the power and permanence of nature in places like that She represents the permanence of an eternal Britain in an ancestral rivalry in which mutual admiration has always matched enmity
|
|
|