presage 的 3 个定义
- a presentiment or foreboding.
- something that portends or foreshadows a future event; an omen, prognostic, or warning indication.
- prophetic significance; augury.
- (5)
pres·aged, pres·ag·ing.
- to have a presentiment of.
- to portend, foreshow, or foreshadow: The incidents may presage war.
- to forecast; predict.
pres·aged, pres·ag·ing.
- to make a prediction.
- Archaic. to have a presentiment.
presage 近义词
prediction, indication
predict or have a feeling
更多presage例句
- It strikes me as a presage of the challenges we’ll increasingly face to survive the climate crisis while we work to solve it.
- From quotes Clinton a lot, and he credits Clinton with saying that an intellectual resurgence has to presage political power.
- But I recall nothing in Possession, Angels & Insects, Babel Tower, or her other books that seems to presage this one.
- There were so many unmistakable signs to presage what was coming that I knew a cannibal feast was about to take place.
- The song is founded upon the story of the aged couple of whom I spoke, and is regarded as a contribution of good presage.
- Only for a moment could any presage of personal fear cloud the sweet serenity of the Maid's nature.
- Ominous word at such a moment, but the presage of something darker and more ominous still.
- The most encouraging time for them was from the year 1874 to 1875, when all seemed to presage better days for them.