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English
Adjective
deep-lying (comparative more deep-lying or deeper-lying, superlative most deep-lying or deepest-lying)
- (literally, figuratively) Established at a deep level.
- Synonyms: deep-rooted, deep-seated, profound
1871–1872, George Eliot [pseudonym; Mary Ann Evans], chapter LXXV, in Middlemarch , volume IV, Edinburgh, London: William Blackwood and Sons, →OCLC, book VIII, page 224:[…] in the bitterness of his soul he excused himself;—was he not justified in shrinking from the task of telling her, since now she knew the truth she had no impulse to speak to him? But a deeper-lying consciousness that he was in fault made him restless, and the silence between them became intolerable to him;
1941, Melville J. Herskovits, chapter 3, in The Myth of the Negro Past, New York, N.Y.: Harper, page 69:[D]espite the fact of European control which has changed the role of the native ruler where it has not obliterated him; […] and which, in the realm of social institutions has subjected such a deep-lying pattern as that of the polygynous family to the impact of Christian conceptions of morality, these cultures continue with all vitality.
1969, Isaiah Berlin, “Vico’s Concept of Knowledge”, in Henry Hardy, editor, Against the Current: Essays in the History of Ideas, London: The Hogarth Press, published 1979, page 117:There must exist a capacity for conceiving […] what ‘it must have been like’ to think, feel, act, in Homeric Greece, in the Rome of the Twelve Tables, in Phoenician colonies given to human sacrifice, or in cultures less remote or exotic but still requiring suspension of the most deep-lying assumptions of the inquirer’s own civilisation.