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TOEIC Link Part 5: eminent versus imminent

Eminent and imminent differ by one letter and rhyme, but they belong to different worlds: eminent describes a person or reputation that is distinguished and respected, while imminent describes an event that is about to happen. Part 5 uses the near-identical spelling to test whether you match the adjective to what it actually describes — a person versus an event.

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TOEIC Link Part 5: eminent versus imminent

Eminent and imminent are separated by a single letter and rhyme closely, yet they describe entirely different things. Eminent (adjective) means distinguished, respected, and standing out in a field. Imminent (adjective) means about to happen at any moment. One is about reputation; the other is about timing. Part 5 relies on the near-identical spelling — and the shared "-inent" ending — to check whether you read for meaning rather than sound. For the full set of look-alike traps, begin with the commonly confused word pairs master index.

The core rule: distinguished versus about to happen

  • eminent (adjective) = distinguished, prominent, and highly regarded. The conference featured an eminent economist as its keynote speaker. / She is an eminent authority on international trade law. It answers how respected or distinguished is this person? and pairs with people, reputations, and roles — an eminent scholar, an eminent surgeon, eminent in her field.
  • imminent (adjective) = about to occur very soon; impending. The crew prepared for the imminent arrival of the storm. / A merger announcement seemed imminent. It answers how soon will this event happen? and pairs with events, changes, and threats — an imminent deadline, an imminent launch, imminent danger.

The two never overlap. Eminent describes who someone is — their standing and prestige. Imminent describes when something will happen — its nearness in time. A memory hook: eminent starts with e for esteemed, and both describe status. Imminent starts with im-, and something "in a minute" is about to happen.

Why Part 5 likes this pair

The pair rewards attention to whether the sentence describes a distinguished person or an approaching event, and the noun the adjective modifies is the reliable tell.

The panel was chaired by an __ professor of biochemistry.

A respected person in a field points to eminent.

Forecasters warned that a hurricane was __.

An event about to happen points to imminent.

Spotting the clue

Check whether the adjective describes a person's standing or an event's timing:

  • Does the word describe someone distinguished or highly respected? → choose eminent (an eminent historian, an eminent career, eminent colleagues).
  • Does the word describe something about to happen? → choose imminent (imminent collapse, an imminent decision, imminent threat).

A quick test: if the word modifies a person or their reputation, it is eminent; if it modifies an event, change, or threat on the near horizon, it is imminent. Watch what follows the adjective — eminent leads to nouns like scholar, figure, or authority, while imminent leads to nouns like arrival, danger, or deadline. For more pairs where a shared look hides a meaning gap, see the business and finance confusable pairs study guide.

Quick self-check

  1. The award recognized her as an __ researcher in renewable energy. (eminent — distinguished)
  2. With the deadline __, the team worked through the night. (imminent — about to happen)
  3. The museum hired an __ curator from a major national gallery. (eminent — respected)

Takeaway

If the sentence describes a distinguished, highly regarded person — a scholar, an authority, a prominent figure — you need eminent, the word tied to esteem. If it describes an event about to happen — a deadline, a storm, a decision — you need imminent, the word for something coming in a minute. Match the adjective to what it modifies and the choice is clear. To see how this pair fits the wider set of Part 5 sound-alikes, return to the commonly confused word pairs master index.