Sentence examples for to premonition from inspiring English sources

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to premonition

noun

A clairvoyant or clairaudient experience, such as a dream, which resonates with some event in the future.

Exact(1)

Such attention to premonition is a rare characteristic he shares with the Red Sox managers who preceded him during the era of the Great Curse.

Similar(59)

It is a typically ambiguous creation, moving from pastoral innocence to premonitions of upheaval (a setting of part of Auden's "A Summer Night" asks, "What doubtful act allows / Our freedom in this English house"), and back to innocence, in a drunken chorus that sounds like the Borough mob in a less vindictive mood.

Dossey suggests that receptivity to premonitions has evolutionary value.

There are literally thousands of other types of experiences that depend on the mind or its components existing outside the brain, from telepathy and clairvoyance to premonitions, synchronicity, and the perception of subtle domains of reality.

The title of "Writing's on the Wall" refers to a premonition of bad things to come, and the song mentions being haunted by a "million shards of glass".

What, exactly, all of that has to do with the sixth sense isn't the sixth sense supposed to be premonition aka the Spider Sense?—I'm not sure.

I have experienced all kinds of foolish melancholy—I've been homesick for countries I've never seen, and longed to be what I couldn't be but all those moods were trivial compared to my premonition of death.

I have experienced all kinds of foolish melancholy — I've been homesick for countries I've never seen, and longed to be what I couldn't be — but all those moods were trivial compared to my premonition of death.

A core aspect of the game involves piecing together evidence found during nightmarish "Otherworld" sequences, analogues to Silent Hill's creepy parallel universe of the same name, which also plays host to Deadly Premonition's disastrous combat system.

Expectation of an inevitable defeat gave way to a premonition of victory.

The expression "timeless work" (another standard from "music-jargonland") takes on a whole new meaning with the Diabellis, which go from Bach (Variation no. 24), Mozart (Wolfie can be heard roaring with laughter over Rabinovitch's shoulder when he plays the 22nd), Brahms (the intermezzo in the 8th), to a premonition of Chopin in the Variation no.

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