Premonitive

/prɪˈmɒnɪtɪv/

पूर्वाभास-सूचक; पूर्वसूचक; चेतावनी देने वाला

Origin & History

From Latin prae- “before” + monēre “to warn”, via the French/Latin-derived form premonitive (akin to premonition).

लैटिन prae- (अर्थ: “पहले”) + monēre (अर्थ: “चेतावनी देना”) से; फ्रेंच/लैटिन-व्युत्पन्न रूप premonitive के माध्यम से (premonition से सम्बद्ध)।

Definition

Premonitive describes something—such as a feeling, dream, remark, or sign—that seems to predict or warn of a future event, often something bad.

प्रीमोनिटिव (पूर्वाभास-सूचक) उस चीज़ का वर्णन करता है—जैसे कोई भावना, सपना, टिप्पणी या संकेत—जो भविष्य की किसी घटना का पहले से आभास या चेतावनी दे, अक्सर किसी अनिष्ट की।

Parts of Speech

Adjective:
She had a premonitive feeling that the trip would be canceled.
उसे पहले से आभास हो रहा था कि यात्रा रद्द हो जाएगी।

Usage Examples

A premonitive dream woke him in the middle of the night.
His premonitive remark proved accurate a week later.
The novel opens with a premonitive scene that hints at tragedy.
There was a premonitive hush in the room before the announcement.

Antonyms

Related Forms

Verb
Premonish / Premonished
Adjective
Adverb
Premonitively / Premonitorily

Idioms & Phrases

A premonitive feeling
पूर्वाभास (या अनिष्ट-पूर्वाभास) वाली भावना
A premonitive dream
पूर्वाभास-सूचक सपना
A premonitive sign
पूर्वसूचक/पूर्वाभास-सूचक संकेत