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Looking for synonyms for "foresee"? Browse alternatives ranked by relevance — sharper word choices for fiction, poetry, and copywriting.
(v)
To have knowledge of beforehand.
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(transitive) To know of (something) before it happens; to expect.
(transitive) To conceive or see something within one's mind. To imagine.
To contradict, oppose.
(transitive) To prevent, delay or hinder something by taking precautionary or anticipatory measures; to avert.
(ambitransitive) To predict; to tell (the future) before it occurs; to prophesy.
(n)
A prediction of the weather.
(ambitransitive) To predict or believe that something will happen
(ambitransitive) To form a judgment of (something) in advance.
Alternative spelling of preempt. [(transitive) To appropriate first.]
To authenticate by means of belief; to surmise; to suppose to be true, especially without proof.
(transitive) To think about seriously.
(transitive) To state explicitly, or in detail, or as a condition.
(transitive) To perceive or detect someone or something with the eyes, or as if by sight.
(adj)
visualized, conceived, imagined
To conceive or see something within one's mind; to imagine or envision.
(transitive) To form a mental image of something; to envision or create something in one's mind.
(transitive) To form; to found; to institute; to set up in business.
(transitive, catenative) To permit, to give permission to.
(transitive, of people) To cause (someone) to be acquainted (with someone else).
To bring into a group, class, set, or total as a (new) part or member.
(transitive) To include (something) as a part.
To cause or engage (someone or something) to become connected or implicated, or to participate, in some activity or situation.
(transitive) To set up; to organize; to put into an orderly sequence or arrangement.
(transitive) To require (something) as a condition of a contract or agreement.
To give what is needed or desired, especially basic needs.
To create a time-schedule.
To foretell events; to exhibit signs of future events; to indicate a favorable or an unfavorable outcome.
(transitive) To stop (an outcome); to keep from (doing something).
(transitive) To hold inside.
(transitive) To create a plan for.
(medicine) To order (a drug or medical device) for use by a particular patient (under licensed authority).
A planned endeavor, usually with a specific goal and accomplished in several steps or stages.
To predict, to foretell (with or without divine inspiration).
Of or pertaining to a god.
(transitive) To predict or foretell something.
(transitive) To serve as a warning or omen of.
(often in a Biblical context) To show or suggest ahead of time; to represent beforehand.
(ambitransitive, chiefly formal) To predict or foretell future events; to prophesy or presage.
(obsolete, transitive) To warn of something in advance.
(transitive) To foreshadow vaguely.
(formal) A statement or an idea which is unproven, but is thought to be true; a guess.
(transitive, UK dialectal, Scotland) To oversee; superintend; direct.
(transitive) To forecast.
(transitive) To envisage in advance; to foresee.
(transitive, rare) To think about beforehand; to anticipate.
To look beforehand, to preview.
(transitive) To feel or perceive beforehand or in advance; to have a presentiment of.
Advance knowledge; foresight.
(transitive) To state in advance
The ability to perceive in advance.
To foresee.
(transitive) To judge beforehand; prejudge.
To perceive in advance.
A prognostic; a premonitory sign; warning or presentiment.
(transitive, archaic) To foretell, to predict.
(transitive) To count beforehand.
(transitive, rare) To foresee.
(transitive) To perceive, ken, or realise ahead of time; foreknow; preconceive.
(transitive) To prefigure.
(transitive) To seek beforehand; seek in advance.
To suggest (someone or something) in advance; to prefigure, to presage.
(transitive, rare, archaic) To presage; predict.
To predict a future event; to hint at something that will happen (especially as a literary device).
(transitive) To predict or forecast, especially through the application of skill.
(transitive, archaic) To show in advance; to foretell, predict.
(transitive) To learn beforehand or in advance.
(nautical) The forward or front part of the hold of a ship.
(transitive, archaic) To say beforehand; predict; foretell.
(transitive) To design or plan beforehand; forecast.
(transitive) To guide beforehand or in advance; guide forth or forward.
A taste beforehand.
(transitive, intransitive) To hear beforehand.
(obsolete) to have a foreboding; to anticipate or predict
To display or have precognition; to have (paranormal) knowledge of a future event before it occurs.
(transitive) To predestine or preordain.
To presage; forebode.
(transitive) To read beforehand or ahead of time.
(transitive) To consider beforehand; think about in advance.
(transitive) To indicate in advance; to predict or foretell.
To precede; to forecast or foreshadow.
To expect; to anticipate future actions based on.
(obsolete) To come before; to anticipate.
A promise made in advance
(transitive) To conceive or imagine beforehand; preconceive.
To cogitate beforehand.
To answer beforehand or in advance
To consider the future, to anticipate future events.
To be capable of predicting the future past a certain point.
A gaze that is forward or beforehand.
(transitive) To spell in advance; foretell; make a warning about something upcoming; tell or indicate beforehand; predict
(ambitransitive, archaic) To write beforehand; write in advance.
To call in advance.
The forward or conscious part of the mind, easily accessible to memory and cognition.
(uncommon, perhaps nonstandard) To prophesy.