Word Meanings - FORESHOW - Book Publishers vocabulary database
To show or exhibit beforehand; to give foreknowledge of; to prognosticate; to foretell. Your looks foreshow You have a gentle heart. Shak. Next, like Aurora, Spenser rose, Whose purple blush the day foreshows. Denham.
Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of FORESHOW)
- Betoken
- Teach
- indicate
- proclaim
- presage
- augur
- portend
- foreshow
- signify
- forebode
- evidence
- declare
- manifest
- involve
- imply
- Foretell
- Predict
- preindicate
- prognosticate
- prophesy
- betoken
- forewarn
- Portend
- Indicate
- threaten
- forbode
- herald
- Typify
- Prefigure
- adumbrate
- predelineate
- prerepresent
- predemonstrate
- foreshadow
Related words: (words related to FORESHOW)
- FORESHADOW
 To shadow or typi Dryden.
- BETOKEN
 1. To signify by some visible object; to show by signs or tokens. A dewy cloud, and in the cloud a bow . . . Betokening peace from God, and covenant new. Milton. 2. To foreshow by present signs; to indicate something future by that which is seen
- TEACHER
 1. One who teaches or instructs; one whose business or occupation is to instruct others; an instructor; a tutor. 2. One who instructs others in religion; a preacher; a minister of the gospel; sometimes, one who preaches without regular ordination.
- IMPLY
 1. To infold or involve; to wrap up. "His head in curls implied." Chapman. 2. To involve in substance or essence, or by fair inference, or by construction of law, when not include virtually; as, war implies fighting. Where a mulicious act is
- TEACHABLENESS
 Willingness to be taught.
- HERALD
 An officer whose business was to denounce or proclaim war, to challenge to battle, to proclaim peace, and to bear messages from the commander of an army. He was invested with a sacred and inviolable character. 2. In the Middle Ages, the officer
- INVOLVEDNESS
 The state of being involved.
- AUGUR
 An official diviner who foretold events by the singing, chattering, flight, and feeding of birds, or by signs or omens derived from celestial phenomena, certain appearances of quadrupeds, or unusual occurrences. 2. One who foretells events by omens;
- DECLAREMENT
 Declaration.
- FOREWARN
 To warn beforehand; to give previous warning, admonition, information, or notice to; to caution in advance. We were forewarned of your coming. Shak.
- PORTEND
 to impend, from an old preposition used in comp. + tendere to 1. To indicate as in future; to foreshow; to foretoken; to bode; -- now used esp. of unpropitious signs. Bacon. Many signs portended a dark and stormy day. Macaulay. 2. To stretch
- EVIDENCER
 One whi gives evidence.
- AUGURER
 An augur. Shak.
- HERALDRY
 The art or office of a herald; the art, practice, or science of recording genealogies, and blazoning arms or ensigns armorial; also, of marshaling cavalcades, processions, and public ceremonies.
- AUGURIAL
 Relating to augurs or to augury. Sir T. Browne.
- THREATEN
 1. To utter threats against; to menace; to inspire with apprehension; to alarm, or attempt to alarm, as with the promise of something evil or disagreeable; to warn. Let us straitly threaten them, that they speak henceforth to no man in this name.
- TEACH
 1. To impart the knowledge of; to give intelligence concerning; to impart, as knowledge before unknown, or rules for practice; to inculcate as true or important; to exhibit impressively; as, to teach arithmetic, dancing, music, or the like; to
- PRESAGE
 1. Something which foreshows or portends a future event; a prognostic; an omen; an augury. "Joy and shout -- presage of victory." Milton. 2. Power to look the future, or the exercise of that power; foreknowledge; presentiment. If there be aught
- PREDICTIONAL
 Prophetic; prognostic.
- PRESAGEMENT
 1. The act or art of presaging; a foreboding. Sir T. Browne. 2. That which is presaged, or foretold. "Ominous presagement before his end. " Sir H. Wotton.
- INEVIDENCE
 Want of evidence; obscurity. Barrow.
- SCHOOL-TEACHER
 One who teaches or instructs a school. -- School"-teach`ing, n.
- INAUGURATE
 Invested with office; inaugurated. Drayton. (more info) omens from the flight of birds (before entering upon any important undertaking); hence, to consecrate, inaugurate, or install, with such
- PREDECLARE
 To declare or announce beforehand; to preannounce. Milman.
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