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The premonition
noun
A clairvoyant or clairaudient experience, such as a dream, which resonates with some event in the future.
Exact(28)
"Before that," Lignelli-Dipple told me, "there's just a hint of something on a scan"—the premonition of a stroke.
The premonition was correct.
The premonition concerned research on a phenomenon known as "priming".
The premonition of ecocide -planetary death- became real for the first time, and it terrified me.
The premonition was 2 yards off the mark, as a headline writer noted in The Advocate, but the field goal was dead on.
Petrov's photos, viewed now, contain the premonition of obliteration.
Similar(32)
No such luck for Bullock's character, Linda Hanson, who looks fairly stressed even before the premonitions kick in.
Mr. Bisch didn't overdo the premonitions of Boris's eventual fall, but his tragic fate was clear in every word.
For Nancy DadiofCoyle of Hamden, the premonitions of disaster for her wedding the same day in 1989, began just before she walked down the aisle.
The premonitions she experiences lead to the film's climax, a sequence borrowed (almost point by point) from Mark Pellington's "Mothman Prophecies" (2002).
There's much talk of Bick's superstitious concerns about Cave's artistry and the premonitions that underlie his lyrics; a "foretelling" in the music of what was to come.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com