foretell 的定义
fore·told, fore·tell·ing.
- to tell of beforehand; predict; prophesy.
foretell 近义词
predict, warn
foretell 的近义词 39 个
- anticipate
- augur
- foreshadow
- portend
- prefigure
- presage
- prophesy
- signify
- adumbrate
- announce
- apprehend
- auspicate
- betoken
- bode
- call
- declare
- disclose
- divine
- divulge
- dope
- figure
- forebode
- forecast
- foreknow
- forewarn
- proclaim
- prognosticate
- read
- reveal
- tell
- call it
- call the shot
- crystal ball it
- dope out
- figure out
- make book
- psych
- see something coming
- soothsay
foretell 的反义词 10 个
更多foretell例句
- There are also players who didn’t have much of a role last season but managed to showcase their talents in this year’s Summer League — possibly foretelling good things.
- Its survival now foretells the fate of the oceans’ ecological health.
- On Thursday, Twitter posts and news reports foretold the public’s anxiety that this song would add insult to this week’s shame.
- Downgrade teams that exit early from their conference tournamentsThere was a time when winning your conference tournament foretold March Madness success.
- There was a mid-1960s spike in college closures that foretold a new era of austerity for which students and parents would pay the price.
- All was not well, and how it would end, even this master politician could not foretell.
- This year there has been only one fuzzy paparazzi photo of the pair and even it seemed to foretell the end.
- The growing theme of anti-establishment sites might just foretell the months ahead.
- Human sagacity cannot explain these facts as they exist to-day, much less could it foretell them three thousand years ago.
- I can read thought, I can foretell the future, and I can sometimes make things happen fortunately, if I try very hard.
- You claim to read minds and foretell the future, and you do not understand that she is fine and honest and utterly admirable!
- I cannot remember that either Sakya Muni or any of his followers assumed the power to foretell the future.
- The country was on the very brink of a civil war, of which no man could foretell the duration or the result.