Prenominate vs Preominate - What's the difference?
prenominate | preominate |
to name or mention ahead of time
(obsolete) aforementioned
*1602 : , act 2 scene 1 line 42
(obsolete, rare) To feel foreboding about; to prophesy.
(obsolete, rare) To be a portent or omen of.
*1646 , Sir Thomas Browne, Pseudodoxia Epidemica , V.23:
*:Because many ravens were seen when Alexander entered Babylon, they were thought to preominate his death; and because an owl appeared before the battle, it presaged the ruin of Crassus.
As verbs the difference between prenominate and preominate
is that prenominate is to name or mention ahead of time while preominate is (obsolete|rare) to feel foreboding about; to prophesy.As an adjective prenominate
is (obsolete) aforementioned.prenominate
English
Etymology 1
Verb
(prenominat)Etymology 2
(etyl) (lena) praenominatus, past participle of .Adjective
(-)- Having ever seen in the prenominate crimes