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All forespeak synonyms

fore·speak
F f

verb forespeak

  • foresee — to have prescience of; to know in advance; foreknow.
  • conclude — If you conclude that something is true, you decide that it is true using the facts you know as a basis.
  • anticipate — If you anticipate an event, you realize in advance that it may happen and you are prepared for it.
  • forecast — to predict (a future condition or occurrence); calculate in advance: to forecast a heavy snowfall; to forecast lower interest rates.
  • call — a demand for redeemable bonds or shares to be presented for repayment
  • think — to seem or appear (usually used impersonally with a dative as the subject).
  • figure — a numerical symbol, especially an Arabic numeral.
  • prophesy — to foretell or predict.
  • portend — to indicate in advance; to foreshadow or presage, as an omen does: The street incident may portend a general uprising.
  • vaticinate — to foretell; prophesy
  • prognosticate — to forecast or predict (something future) from present indications or signs; prophesy.
  • surmise — to think or infer without certain or strong evidence; conjecture; guess.
  • guess — to arrive at or commit oneself to an opinion about (something) without having sufficient evidence to support the opinion fully: to guess a person's weight.
  • forebode — to foretell or predict; be an omen of; indicate beforehand; portend: clouds that forebode a storm.
  • presage — a presentiment or foreboding.
  • infer — to derive by reasoning; conclude or judge from premises or evidence: They inferred his displeasure from his cool tone of voice.
  • conjecture — A conjecture is a conclusion that is based on information that is not certain or complete.
  • read — to look at carefully so as to understand the meaning of (something written, printed, etc.): to read a book; to read music.
  • adumbrate — to outline; give a faint indication of
  • foretell — to tell of beforehand; predict; prophesy.
  • presume — to take for granted, assume, or suppose: I presume you're tired after your drive.
  • judge — Alan L(aVern) born 1932, U.S. astronaut.
  • omen — anything perceived or happening that is believed to portend a good or evil event or circumstance in the future; portent.
  • gather — to bring together into one group, collection, or place: to gather firewood; to gather the troops.
  • suppose — to assume (something), as for the sake of argument or as part of a proposition or theory: Suppose the distance to be one mile.
  • augur — If something augurs well or badly for a person or a future situation, it is a sign that things will go well or badly.
  • croak — When a frog or bird croaks, it makes a harsh, low sound.
  • telegraph — an apparatus, system, or process for transmitting messages or signals to a distant place, especially by means of an electric device consisting essentially of a sending instrument and a distant receiving instrument connected by a conducting wire or other communications channel.
  • envision — Imagine as a future possibility; visualize.
  • figure out — a numerical symbol, especially an Arabic numeral.
  • make book — to enter in a book or list; record; register.
  • psych out — to intimidate or frighten psychologically, or make nervous (often followed by out): to psych out the competition.
  • size up — the spatial dimensions, proportions, magnitude, or bulk of anything: the size of a farm; the size of the fish you caught.
  • soothsay — to foretell events; predict.
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