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  1. a feeling that something, especially something unpleasant, is going to happen: [ + that ] He had a premonition that his plane would crash, so he took the train. She had a sudden premonition of what the future might bring. Synonyms. feeling (EMOTION) foreboding literary. presentiment formal. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

    • Premonition

      PREMONITION translate: (尤指不祥的)預兆,預感. Learn more in the...

    • Polski

      premonition definicja: 1. a feeling that something,...

  2. The meaning of PREMONITION is previous notice or warning : forewarning. How to use premonition in a sentence. previous notice or warning : forewarning; anticipation of an event without conscious reason : presentiment

  3. a feeling that something, especially something unpleasant, is going to happen: [ + that ] He had a premonition that his plane would crash, so he took the train. She had a sudden premonition of what the future might bring. Synonyms. feeling (EMOTION) foreboding literary. presentiment formal. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  4. premonition n (anticipation of [sth] bad) premonición nf : presentimiento nm : presagio nm : David had a vague premonition of danger when he walked down the empty street. David tenía una vaga premonición de peligro mientras caminaba por la calle desierta. premonition n (omen, warning sign) premonición nf : augurio nm : presagio nm

  5. noun. a feeling of anticipation of or anxiety over a future event; presentiment: He had a vague premonition of danger. Synonyms: sign, omen, portent, foreboding. a forewarning. premonition. / prɪˈmɒnɪtərɪ; ˌprɛməˈnɪʃən; -trɪ / noun. an intuition of a future, usually unwelcome, occurrence; foreboding. an early warning of a future event; forewarning.

  6. 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. This noun is from Middle French premonicion , from Late Latin praemonitio, from Latin praemonere "to warn in advance," from the prefix prae- "before" plus ...