Imminent in a sentence as an adjective

Again though, interpretation of what speech will lead to "imminent lawless action" is not defined so this is a poor test as well.

I've been reading about the imminent death of publishers for a while now, but I don't think they're ever going to disappear completely.

Perhaps as the article suggests this is the canary in the coal mine that portends the imminent downfall of imgur as a non spammy image host.

As deplorable as his speech was, it was not an identifiable threat of some imminent danger to some specific victim.

Is Zynga going to fire people until they are a dozen people in a garage so they can "lead" again?- No re-assurance that future downsizing is not imminent.

The threat has to be sufficiently plausible and imminent that it could convince a reasonable person to give in to the blackmailers demands.

There's an very important distinction between killing someone to prevent imminent bodily harm and putting someone on a **** list and sending the drone out to get them.

It's the distinctly non-imminent premeditation that makes the difference.

But to suggest that a radical change in the law of copyright is imminent - or that it is about to be abolished - is, in my view, to misread the legal landscape in a serious way.

Clearly in some cases peaceful criticism of violent religious practices, as well as harmless cartoons that are not even disparaging have lead to imminent lawless action.

The summary at the bottom doesn't have a whole lot less information than all the content before it, and doesn't lead the reader to believe for the first 10 minutes that some ground-shaking vulnerability disclosure is imminent.

Imminent definitions

adjective

close in time; about to occur; "retribution is at hand"; "some people believe the day of judgment is close at hand"; "in imminent danger"; "his impending retirement"

See also: impendent impending