Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    Pre·mo·ni·tion
    /ˌprēməˈniSH(ə)n/

    noun

    • 1. a strong feeling that something is about to happen, especially something unpleasant: "he had a premonition of imminent disaster"
  2. The meaning of PREMONITION is previous notice or warning : forewarning. How to use premonition in a sentence.

  3. A premonition is a warning that comes in advance, or a feeling that something is going to happen. Like the synonym foreboding, a premonition usually refers to something bad or harmful.

  4. Premonition definition: a feeling of anticipation of or anxiety over a future event; presentiment. See examples of PREMONITION used in a sentence.

  5. PREMONITION definition: 1. a feeling that something, especially something unpleasant, is going to happen: 2. a feeling…. Learn more.

  6. PREMONITION meaning: 1. a feeling that something, especially something unpleasant, is going to happen: 2. a feeling…. Learn more.

  7. If you have a premonition, you have a feeling that something is going to happen, often something unpleasant. He had an unshakable premonition that he would die. ...a real, genuine premonition of bad news.

  8. a feeling that something is going to happen, especially something unpleasant. premonition (of something) a premonition of disaster. premonition (that…) He had a premonition that he would never see her again. Perhaps he had a premonition about what might happen in London. Oxford Collocations Dictionary. Word Origin.

  9. A feeling that something, esp. something bad, will happen; foreboding; presentiment. Webster's New World. Similar definitions. Synonyms: forewarning. foreboding. vibes. prediction. misgiving. hunch. feeling. apprehension. warning. sign. omen. portent. boding. presentiment. Other Word Forms of Premonition. Noun. Singular: premonition.

  10. 1. an intuition of a future, usually unwelcome, occurrence; foreboding. 2. an early warning of a future event; forewarning. [C16: from Late Latin praemonitiō, from Latin praemonēre to admonish beforehand, from prae before + monēre to warn, advise] premonitory adj.

  11. Jun 20, 2024 · Understanding Premonition. According to the American Psychological Association (APA), a premonition—usually referred to as “precognition” in psychological settings—is the ability of a person to predict or perceive that they’ve predicted a future event.

  1. People also search for