Marxists
Imminent is an adjective--imminent danger.
The prefix for imminent is "im", according to Webster.
imminent = about to happenBuses in a traffic circle are a certain sign of imminent danger.The rattlesnake does not always rattle when the strike is imminent.
"imminent" refers to something that is about to happen.Immient is possibly a mis-spelling of 'imminent' which means "about to happen "
Imminent is a word to describe that something is almost positively sure to occur. The reason I say almost is because the with has been used so many times like "Society is destroying our planet and we are heading for imminent doom", or "If you do that, you will be heading for imminent danger", or "An asteroid is heading our was and we are facing our imminent destruction." More correctly used should be "It could be our imminent destruction".
The group that believed a revolution was imminent varied by context, but during the late 18th century in France, for example, the common people, including the bourgeoisie and working class, felt that social and economic injustices would lead to an uprising. Similarly, in the early 20th century, radical socialist groups in Russia anticipated a revolution due to widespread discontent with the Tsarist regime and economic hardship. These sentiments were often fueled by revolutionary ideologies and a desire for systemic change.
Permanent Revolution - group - was created in 2006.
False
False
Revolution Health Group was created in 2005-07.
Political Group of Okinawa Revolution was created in 2005.
Imminent is an adjective--imminent danger.
the impact that it had on the revolution of France was the fact that it the people of france started to believe in what they thought and not what others thought. they started to follow the philiphers
We moved belowdecks when the storm became imminent OR The crash was imminent.
false
Revolution in the west
Basically, the nobles thought everything was fine, and the peasants thought society needed changing -- hence the Revolution.