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    Pre·science
    /ˈpreSH(ē)əns/

    noun

    • 1. the fact of knowing something before it takes place; foreknowledge: "with extraordinary prescience, Jung actually predicted the Nazi eruption"
  2. Prescience is the ability to know something before it happens, either by divine or human foresight. Learn the origin, synonyms, examples, and word history of prescience from the Merriam-Webster dictionary.

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  4. Prescience is the ability to know or correctly suggest what will happen in the future. Learn how to use this word in sentences and see synonyms and translations.

  5. If you can see into the future, then you have prescience. The word prescience might look like pre + science, but it really comes from the Latin word praescientia, which means "fore-knowledge" — or knowledge you know before anyone else.

  6. Prescience is the knowledge of events before they take place or happen. Learn the word origin, synonyms, pronunciation, and usage of prescience with examples from literature and media.

  7. Prescience is the quality of knowing or appearing to know about things before they happen. Learn how to use this formal word with pronunciation, pictures, and example sentences from Oxford University Press.

  8. Prescience is the knowledge of events before they take place; foreknowledge; foresight. Find out the origin, pronunciation, and translations of prescience, and see the difference between prescience and instinct or intuition.

  9. Prescience is the apparent knowledge of things before they happen or come into being. Learn the origin, synonyms, and sentence examples of this word from YourDictionary.

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