Sentence definition - When someone describes something as omnipresent, they are using it to describe something as being everywhere all at once.
Sentence examples:
1)These days the media are omnipresent.
2) God is reinterpreted, and in place of an extra-mundane creator is an omnipresent life and power.
3) Red and green are omnipresent throughout the holiday season.
Prefix
Omni = all
Suffix
ent = one who
Roots
None
Other forms of the word
None
Etymology
Language of origin- Latin
Older forms of the word
omnipraesentem = present everywhere
Background of the word
The original origin of the word omnipresent means everywhere present, in all places at the same time. The word was though to be founded in c. 1600, from Medieval Latin omnipraesentem (nominative omnipraesens) "present everywhere," from Latin omnis "all, every" (see omni-) + pretenses"present" People in Rome often used the term omnipresent when talking about religion whereas today people use it commonly whenever talking.
Where it came from geographically- Ancient Italy
Creative model: