profound sense of• Because of this profound sense ofacceptance, we understand and come to terms with our own uniqueness.• Uh so as this profound sense ofdisappointment and disenfranchisement that seems to come with each cycle.• He blushed from a profound sense ofembarrassment.• And yet, he could see in his grandfather a shameless self-importance, a profound sense ofentitlement.• Overall there is a profound sense of estrangement and disappointment afoot in our country.• Hurrying out with a profound sense offailure, she brushed by a man watching from the stairs of the rehearsalstudio.• The staff in turn are likely to experience guilt and a profound sense of failure.
Originprofound
(1200-1300)Old Frenchprofond“deep”, from Latinprofundus, from fundus“bottom”