different between premonition vs boding
premonition
English
Alternative forms
- præmonition (archaic)
Etymology
Mid 15th century, from Anglo-Norman premunition, from Ecclesiastical Latin praemoniti?nem (“a forewarning”), form of praemoniti?, from Latin praemonitus, past participle of praemone?, from prae (“before”) (English pre-) + mone? (“to warn”) (from which English monitor).
Compare Germanic forewarning.
Pronunciation
- enPR: pr?m'?-, pr?'m?-n?sh??n
- Rhymes: -???n
Noun
premonition (plural premonitions)
- A clairvoyant or clairaudient experience, such as a dream, which resonates with some event in the future.
- Synonym: vision
- A strong intuition that something is about to happen (usually something negative, but not exclusively).
- Synonyms: bad feeling, foreboding, gut feeling, hunch, (informal) second sight
Derived terms
- premonitory
Translations
References
premonition From the web:
- what premonition does romeo have
- what premonition mean
- what premonition does juliet have
- what premonition/nightmare does romeo have
- what premonition did esperanza have
- what premonitions of santiago's death are there
- what premonition does hrothgar have
- what premonition does romeo have in act 1 scene 4
boding
English
Etymology
From bode +? -ing.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?b??d??/
- (General American) IPA(key): /?bo?d??/
- Hyphenation: bod?ing
Adjective
boding (comparative more boding, superlative most boding)
- foreboding, ominous, portending.
Noun
boding (plural bodings)
- gerund of bode: a prediction of disaster; an omen, a portent.
Verb
boding
- present participle of bode
Anagrams
- Dobing
boding From the web:
- what boding mean
- what boding well mean
- what does boding mean
- boarding school
- boarding pass
- boxing day
- what does bode well mean
- what does boding
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- premonition vs boding
- clothing vs gear
- important vs ingrained
- plan vs paragon
- disquietude vs solicitude
- idiosyncratic vs singular
- inactive vs languid
- merge vs commingle
- comfort vs elation
- power vs conduct
- conjectural vs imaginary
- passage vs abstract
- contemptuous vs hard
- torment vs scourge
- ghost vs incorporeality
- king vs shah
- thrive vs mushroom
- shy vs circumspect
- eager vs intense
- discourage vs dull