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Prescient vs Forebode - What's the difference?

prescient | forebode |

As an adjective prescient

is having knowledge of events before they take place; possessing or exhibiting prescience.

As a verb forebode is

to predict a future event; to hint at something that will happen (especially as a literary device).

As a noun forebode is

(obsolete) prognostication; presage.

prescient

English

Adjective

(en adjective)
  • Having knowledge of events before they take place; possessing or exhibiting prescience.
  • Anagrams

    *

    forebode

    English

    Alternative forms

    * forbode (much less commonly used)

    Verb

    (forebod)
  • To predict a future event; to hint at something that will happen (especially as a literary device).
  • * (Nathaniel Hawthorne), The Scarlet Letter
  • There can be, if I forebode aright, no power, short of the Divine mercy, to disclose, whether by uttered words, or by type or emblem, the secrets that may be buried with a human heart.
  • To be prescient of (some ill or misfortune); to have an inward conviction of, as of a calamity which is about to happen; to augur despondingly.
  • * Tennyson
  • His heart forebodes a mystery.
  • * Middleton
  • Sullen, desponding, and foreboding nothing but wars and desolation, as the certain consequence of Caesar's death.
  • * H. James
  • I have a sort of foreboding about him.

    Noun

  • (obsolete) prognostication; presage
  • See also

    * bode