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Definitions

precognition

[pree-kog-nish-uhn] / ˌpri kɒgˈnɪʃ ən /


Example Sentences

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Today we may view that observation as something akin to informed precognition.

From Salon • Feb. 18, 2025

Wallace had “a level of precognition about certain things,” he adds.

From New York Times • Sep. 5, 2021

Yet 60 years later, the most accepted explanation of precognition is that we suffer from cognitive biases, retroactively seeking patterns to make sense of a senseless world.

From The Guardian • Sep. 29, 2019

To read those lines is like coming upon a precognition, a message to the present from the past.

From Los Angeles Times • Aug. 16, 2019

For decades, these schools, and other institutions, studied subjects as varied as precognition, telepathy, psychokinesis, energy fields, reincarnation, and mediumship.

From "American Spirits" by Barb Rosenstock




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