Premonition in a sentence as a noun

BTC is a premonition, not the real deal.

Some people say that is such a huge coincidence that it must prove some sort of premonition.

There was strange premonition of this in the 1990s Left Behind scifi series.

If you have the premonition to research it ahead of time and keep updated on it, then good for you.

"How many people are identifying with that premonition right this second?

Eerie premonition: We'd all feel better about shelling out the bucks for a Power Mac 9600 if we could get a tower with leopard spots.

The biggest problem I have with his "premonition" and the date given of 30 years is that a number of people could have written the exact same prediction in 1979.

I'd say "premonition", but that word summons "supernatural" connotations to me. Really it's just common sense, with even a mediocre knowledge of history.

From experience, I usually have a strong premonition when a particular query will be more appropriate for Google to handle, so I don't waste time hitting DuckDuckGo first.

Is it premonition or self-fulfilling prophecy that most open-source developers felt a little queasy about Mono?

There is some good technical execution advice here, but the basic premonition is wrong:"From a development point of view SEO is the concern of how well a robot can read and understand your content.

Premonition definitions

noun

a feeling of evil to come; "a steadily escalating sense of foreboding"; "the lawyer had a presentiment that the judge would dismiss the case"

See also: foreboding presentiment boding

noun

an early warning about a future event

See also: forewarning