Presage in a sentence as a noun

Perhaps you were looking for precede, presage, or produce?

But a sharp rise in hospitalizations does seem to presage a lot of deaths.

And presage our ability to tackle climate change.

Let's also hope that it doesn't presage rounded screens on MacBooks to bring screen-roundedness parity with iPhones.

The 11 new battalions of anti ship ballistic missiles that china has fielded in the last decade would also presage that intent.

I'm more concerned that the flare implies some instability that could presage a much more energetic event.

Presage in a sentence as a verb

If so, does this presage an attempt at resurgence that will eventually be for naught when a big economic downturn hits and everyone goes bankrupt?

You ignored the "it is even more" clause, which makes it clear that he believes the current market dynamics presage what would happen in a deregulated market.

This might seem like politics, but economics and financial regulation are frequent and valuable topics of discussion on HN; this report may presage significant changes.

If sub launched drones can eventually engage in precision bombstrikes and air-superiority operations, this could presage another shift in naval warfare.

The point is not that autonomous weapons systems are possible, but that their existence does not presage SkyNet, and the whole discussion distracts from the real societal impact, like some people being denied shelter/finance/employment/social connection/etc based on opaque ML boxes that intrinsically discriminate but in a way that can't be easily interrogated it controlled with legislation or court action.

Presage definitions

noun

a foreboding about what is about to happen

noun

a sign of something about to happen; "he looked for an omen before going into battle"

See also: omen portent prognostic prognostication prodigy

verb

indicate by signs; "These signs bode bad news"