impend
impend — verb
- impendpresent simple I / you / we / they
- impends3rd person singular
- impending-ing form
- impendedpast simple
1. when something bad or difficult is about to happen, and you feel that it is comi
when something bad or difficult is about to happen, and you feel that it is coming very soon — for example, a disaster, a storm, a war, or a difficult conversation that nobody wants to have
Theo knew that a difficult talk with his boss impended after the failed project.
intransitive — event + impends, no direct object
With tensions rising along the border, the threat of armed conflict impended.
The storm that impended over the coastal village forced hundreds to leave their homes.
Carlos felt that layoffs impended after the company lost its biggest client.
Putri sensed that something bad impended when the manager called an urgent meeting.
- loom
more visual and dramatic — suggests something large and indistinct appearing on the horizon ('danger looms'); slightly less formal than impend
- threaten
more active — can take an object ('threatens to destroy the city') and implies a direct danger, while impend is more passive
- be imminent
more neutral — can describe both good and bad events ('their arrival is imminent'), whereas impend is limited to unpleasant ones
文法句型
event/subject + impends — no object
commonly used as participial adjective: impending + noun
用法筆記
The participial adjective form 'impending' (e.g., 'impending disaster,' 'impending doom') is far more common in everyday English than the bare verb. The subject of 'impend' must be an unpleasant or threatening event — it cannot describe neutral or positive situations.