foreshadow 的定义
- to show or indicate beforehand; prefigure: Political upheavals foreshadowed war.
foreshadow 近义词
indicate
更多foreshadow例句
- Neatly, it also serves as foreshadowing for Paris’s romance with Asher Fleming, also introduced in this episode.
- The huge buildup in delinquencies foreshadows the flood to come.
- His attorney will likely claim self-defense, as foreshadowed by the president.
- So while modest, Neuralink’s research already foreshadows how this technology could one day change life as we know it.
- And, a few researchers suspect, it may even foreshadow a new perspective on reality.
- But the cold hard numbers that Korb advances foreshadow a day of reckoning, just not yet.
- That would only foreshadow the “fractured antislavery world” to come, as Kantrowitz calls it, which emerged after the Civil War.
- Weirdly, he mostly avoided Cubism, even though he got wild Cezannes that foreshadow that movement.
- The harshest hit in what's available publicly is saved for the Obamas and could foreshadow a talking point if she runs in 2012.
- Those allusions to former times foreshadow an evil intent on their part.
- These events were supposed to foreshadow the speedy demise of the Peel administration.
- It is impossible to predict or in any way to foreshadow any fusion of these hostile elements.
- Their flight was considered to foreshadow evil to the royal family, and their reappearance was regarded as a happy omen.
- Just as death seemed a protracted sleep, so did the dream come to foreshadow the life after death.