Examples of 'presaged' in a sentence

Meaning of "presaged"

presage (verb) - To foreshadow or indicate a future event, often serving as a warning or sign of what is to come
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  • simple past tense and past participle of presage

How to use "presaged" in a sentence

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presaged
Fasting traditionally presaged a great spiritual struggle.
It presaged the building of the community itself.
Victory in court related matters is also presaged.
The films presaged the animated cartoon.
A massive preparatory bombardment presaged the attack.
That has presaged every revolution in history.
Huge shifts in social mood and direction are presaged.
Where the presaged dream of delusion would vanish.
This disregard for papal authority presaged later conflicts.
The results presaged the many disasters to come.
He elaborated an ethics based on personal consciousness which presaged protestant thought.
Azariah presaged the acquisition of wealth.
The pallor of his face presaged his tragic end.
This presaged her roles in jidaigeki.
His chapter on respiration presaged the discovery of oxygen.

See also

It presaged the coming financial crisis.
It neutralizes the danger of violent death by torture presaged in a birthday horoscope.
His insight presaged certain findings of modern neuroscience.
These astrological meteors were typically held to be omens that presaged major world events.
Apparently it presaged to disastrous sea.
Many parishes ignored this order as it was commonly thought that it presaged a further tax.
This presaged other directives.
The increasing use of smart cards for decrypting signals presaged a diversification in pirating activities.
It presaged something wrong.
The trip was a transformative experience for her and presaged her eventual career in diplomacy.
These events are presaged by the changing of the stars in the skies.
His choice of subject matter and compositional style presaged the development of verismo opera.
This setup presaged the use of LEDs for optical communication applications.
The outcome of the attacks was far from the doom presaged in the press.
His beginnings hardly presaged the success he would later achieve.
Western economic historians have tended to dismiss the suggestion that these developments presaged a capitalist transformation.
Videotex services presaged what would come later with the internet.
UK weather modification experiments at the time presaged current practice in the US.
Both of them presaged a massive uptick in human societal complexity and innovation.
His outstanding work since his initial appointment presaged such a development in his brilliant career.
Nothing presaged the twilight of lights and colors that we enjoyed minutes later.
Some critics say her artwork presaged the modern digital information era.
This presaged some of the worst and most persistent late winter weather in history.
The new military organization also presaged the creation of regiments of cavalry and dragoons.
An earlier meeting between the kings of England and France presaged this one.
Both factors presaged an oppositional relationship with the landed oligarchy and business elites.
The closure of the division Oldsmobile presaged a larger consolidation of GM brands group.
This presaged the development of Gongsun power in the northeast.
This emphasis on work en plein air presaged the landscape work of Hague School artists.
A Cinematographic Revolution chronicles how Iranian films reflected contemporaneous society and often presaged social change.
This period also presaged a properly constituted legislation and a radical shift away from feudalism.
The unanimity reached in the Committee surely presaged what would occur in the General Assembly.
Nothing presaged a fact So evil and abominable.
And his name is the Presaged One.
Clinton presaged the rise of Trump.

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