prescience - use in sentences

Converse of object

  • have: Brown had the prescience to realize that the public places greater trust in bankers to look after their money, than politicians.
  • show: In casting an eye to the future, Timeslip often showed remarkable prescience in its choice of themes.
  • claim: Tim In light of the subsequent conversation, I claim prescience rather than glibness Prescience is the ability to predict the future through vision.

Adjective modifier

  • remarkable: In casting an eye to the future, Timeslip often showed remarkable prescience in its choice of themes.
  • extraordinary: Tony Blair: No, that was just the remarkable good luck of the British Presidency, with extraordinary prescience.
  • divine: Few of them have been fulfilled in any sense, and those required no divine prescience to foresee the result.
  • great: With great prescience Linde renamed the cellars the Phoenix Distillery, and from the ashes of one industry another emerged.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.