premonition|premonitions in English
noun
[pre·mo·ni·tion || ‚prɪːmə'nɪʃn /pre-]
advance feeling, presentiment; forewarning; intuitive flash
Use "premonition|premonitions" in a sentence
1. My premonition was right.
2. Soon their premonition came true.
3. I am sick of these witches and the premonitions about my baby.
4. She had a vague premonition of danger.
5. 3 synonyms for Boding: foreBoding, premonition, presentiment
6. He had an unshakable premonition that he would die.
7. She had a premonition that helped save Arthur's life.
8. He had a superstitious premonition that it would be Ivor Newley.
9. Los Angeles is a premonition of this new civilization.
10. Even then I had a premonition of danger, of menace.
11. Then what's the premonition of the lake supposed to mean?
12. He had a premonition that he would never see her again.
13. Perhaps he had a premonition about what might happen in London.
14. I wonder if she had a premonition of her own fate.
15. She had a sudden premonition of what the future might bring.
16. In young man heart suddenly crimple , produced a kind bodeful premonition.
17. The day before her accident, she had a premonition of danger.
18. He had a horrible premonition that she was coming up to Rome.
19. She had a premonition that she would die in a plane crash.
20. 5 In young man heart suddenly crimple , produced a kind bodeful premonition.
21. They commemorated that earlier tragedy with a premonition that it might happen again.
22. Augury: See: caution , caveat , harbinger , indicant , indication , indicator , precursor , premonition , symptom , threat , token , warning
23. As we approached the house, I had a premonition that something terrible had happened.
24. Men, just like elephants, have a premonition they are going to die...
25. A silent, peaceful place but he had a premonition of something terrible.