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Discover LudwigThe word "foresees" is correct and usable in written English
You can use it when you are referring to predicting something before it happens. Example sentence: The economic analyst foresees a rise in the stock market over the next three months.
Dictionary
foresees
verb
Third person singular of foresee
Exact(60)
The prime minister asked that the procedures be speeded up so that the 20 Feb decision, which foresees a first interim agreement by the end of April, be implemented".
He is already talking about a screen version of Iceman, and foresees a small run of films based on plays, because the material is to hand and he sees a ready way into it.
As the jollity reaches its height, Johan foresees the coming doom and screams at them all to dig in and hide if they want to live.
One possibility for the timing of the announcement lifting the embargo is that the US understanding of the Lausanne framework deal foresees a lifting of sanctions backed by a potential new UN resolution on conventional and ballistic weapons sales to Iran which Russia appears to have pre-empted.
Friedrich Reck's Diary of a Man in Despair (New York Review Books), begins in 1937 when this German novelist and scholar foresees the catastrophe to be inflicted by Hitler, that nonentity who "wears his cap like a Berlin tram-driver".
Mr Bane foresees a scenario in the not-too-distant future in which big companies find that their delicate, just-in-time, global electronic supply chains seize up.
Micropower and megapower will then work together.ABB foresees the emergence of "microgrids" made up of all sorts of distributed generators, including fuel cells (which combine hydrogen and oxygen to produce electricity cleanly), wind and solar power.
Russia has all but promised to veto any text that foresees independence for the territory.
JPMorgan, a foreign bank, foresees growth of just 7%.The imponderable is the oil price.
Yet he foresees less volatility in future, thanks in part to the positive impact that firms such as his have had on the efficiency of corporate supply chains.
IF BRITISH beer bellies in Spain and stag parties in Prague horrify, don't read on: an article from the Harvard Business Review reported on Economist.com's Management page foresees a global tourism industry in the year 2020, struggling to accommodate up to two billion new sightseers from newly developed countries.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com