presage|presages in English
noun
[pre·sage || 'presɪdʒ]
omen, portent, sign; intuitive feeling about future events; caution, warning, admonitio
Use "presage|presages" in a sentence
1. Those clouds presage a storm.
2. The incident is believed to presage war.
3. Such incidents often presage war.
4. The clouds presage a storm.
5. Figurines presage the emergence of sculpture in greece.
6. Conclusion: Dynamic transcutaneous bilirubinometry can presage newborn pathological jaundice.
7. They presage the reinvention of Reaganomics for the 21st century.
8. Foreshadow or presage Familiarity information: Annunciate …
9. The lowering clouds presage a storm.
10. The change could presage serious problems.
11. Those black clouds presage a storm.
12. By certain signs we may presage of heats and rains.
13. 25 Those black clouds presage a storm.
14. But it may presage a longer slowdown.
15. Alternatively, this finding may presage respiratory failure.
16. And the augurs mock their own presage.
17. This is a presage and an urge.
18. In dreams one may presage the future.
19. To indicate or give warning of beforehand; presage.
20. Recent small earthquakes may presage a much larger one.
21. Despite their antiquity, their bodies were already starting to presage humanity, the scientists said.
22. This is a cheerful work with a delectable slow movement and a finale which presages Papageno's music.
23. Bode definition is - to indicate (something, such as a future event) by signs : presage
24. On past form the slowdown seemed likely to presage a long slump.
25. It was not, as its critics asserted, meant to presage an alliance between the Left and the Liberals.