The state of impending; the state of being imminent and liable to happen soon; also, that which impends.(noun)
Gnu Collaboartive International Dictionary of English: licensed under The Code Project Open License (CPOL)
Use "impendence" in a sentence
"We fear that she is right that the Obama administration's impendence makes the economic picture notably bleaker -- but we hope that she is wrong, and in any case such an opinion does not belong in a news story."
"Still 1955 it officially accepted the real impendence coming closer to the Soviet view under Khruschov and plunging into electoral politics."
"In terms of circuit components it is a resistance feeding an impendence with a constant 45 degree 1-j phase and magnitude that varies with the inverse of the square root of the frequency."