different between foresee vs forbode

foresee

English

Etymology

From Middle English foreseen, forseen, from Old English fores?on; equivalent to fore- +? see. Similar formations in Dutch voorzien, German vorsehen, Latin pr?vide?.

Pronunciation

  • (US) IPA(key): /f???si/
  • (UK) IPA(key): /f???si?/
  • Rhymes: -i?

Verb

foresee (third-person singular simple present foresees, present participle foreseeing, simple past foresaw, past participle foreseen)

  1. To be able to see beforehand: to anticipate; predict.
    • 1838, Charles Dickens, The Lamplighter:
      "I foresee in this," he says, "the breaking up of our profession."
  2. (obsolete) To provide.
    • 1625, Francis Bacon, Of Vicissitude of Things
      Great shoals of people, which go on to populate, without foreseeing means of life.

Derived terms

  • foreseeable

Translations

See also

  • forsee
  • unforeseen

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forbode

English

Etymology 1

From Middle English forbode, forbod, from Old English forbod (a forbidding, prohibition), from Proto-Germanic *frabud? (prohibition), from Proto-Indo-European *b?ewd?- (to be awake, fully perceive), equivalent to for- +? bode. Cognate with Dutch verbod, German Verbot, Danish forbud, Swedish förbud. More at forbid.

Alternative forms

  • forbod

Noun

forbode (plural forbodes)

  1. (archaic) A forbidding, a prohibition; a command forbidding a thing.
    God's/The Lord's forbode
    • 1621, Henry Ainsworth, Annotations Upon the First Book of Moses, Called Genesis, Leviticus, Ch. IIII:
      So Moses himself explaineth it in the words here folowing, and in v. 13. 22. 27.   commandements ]or, charges: meaning prohibitions, or forbodes. For God commandeth both to eschew evil, and to doe good.
    • 1894, Reginald Brimley Johnson, Popular British Ballads, Ancient and Modern, page 142:
      Thus Cloudesle cleft the apple in two,
      That many a man might see;
      "Over God's forbode," said the king,
      "That thou shoot at me!"
    • 2012, The Broadview Anthology of Medieval Drama, The Towneley Plays: The First Shepherds' Play (translated from Middle English into English), page 153:
      FIRST SHEPHERD. God's forbode thou spare't and thou drink every deal.7
      7 God's forbode ... deal   God forbid (literally "God's forbidding") that you refrain from drinking even if you drink it all.

Etymology 2

From Middle English [Term?], from Old English forb?ad/forbudon, past tense forms of forb?odan (to forbid). More at forbid.

Verb

forbode

  1. obsolete simple past of forbid.

Etymology 3

Verb

forbode (third-person singular simple present forbodes, present participle forboding, simple past and past participle forboded)

  1. Alternative form of forebode
Translations

References

  • forbode at OneLook Dictionary Search

Norwegian Nynorsk

Alternative forms

  • (of past participle) forbydd, forbydt

Adjective

forbode

  1. neuter singular of forboden

Verb

forbode

  1. past participle of forby
  2. past participle of forbyde

forbode From the web:

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