To make a prediction or prophecy.
Sinônimos
Examples for "call "
Examples for "call "
1 Alexander's lecture will call for reform in Europe, not exit from Europe.
2 Meat Industry Ireland members support your call for collaboration across the sector.
3 Political parties said it was too quick to call the election result.
4 A second call came in about 45 minutes later, Letten's statement said.
5 They call themselves 'the bucket list family' for a very good reason.
1 Technology offers great promise with 'intelligent borders'. Hunt was educated at Oxford.
2 Plans for the area hold the promise of better times to come.
3 Hill House has fallen far short of its original promise , I think.
4 The early signs do not offer the expected level of promise , however.
5 And yet 2015 had begun with great promise for Tunisia's tourism industry.
1 Conditions are forecast to deteriorate over coming days particularly in coastal areas.
2 However, the forecast now predicts the rain will continue past that point.
3 Did Recorded Future forecast Tunisian political violence in the summer of 2010?
4 Cost inflation this year is in line with managers' forecast , said Premier.
5 However, the forecast was clouded by higher production costs and investment expenditure.
1 Trump said public health experts anticipate shortages of respirators for healthcare workers.
2 However, we don't anticipate a significant increase at this point in time.
3 He said: I do not anticipate a great political standoff about this.
4 Speculators anticipate consolidation in the sector as a result of lower business.
5 Never one to lose the moment, Barry said, I don't anticipate problems.
1 I decided to take that as a good omen and kept walking.
2 Adeline turned pale; and Mortimer himself shuddered as he beheld the omen .
3 It is a bad omen to wet the foot in these springs.
4 This is a good omen for the release of her next project.
5 The whelp, as an omen of evil, is mentioned in the Edda.
1 His nomadic past doesn't exactly bode too well for South Africa's future.
2 Williamson said the data did not bode well for the coming months.
3 Analysts say a Democratic sweep could also bode well for emerging markets.
4 Analysts said the ruling could bode well for ExxonMobil's case at ICSID.
5 What people say does not bode well for the future of humanity.
1 S&Ps changes may even foretell a coming upturn for banks, he said.
2 Could push-ups foretell the future and the state of a person's heart?
3 I expect the king can foretell he will have a great future.
4 No one at present can foretell the outcome of the European War.
5 But you can't foretell the future and you're not a mind reader.
1 Its clean air, water, and energy standards invariably presage similar efforts nationwide.
2 Already, university students have held strikes, which traditionally presage labour union unrest.
3 But the softness in the Christmas air did not presage a thaw.
4 The decrease in expensive markets could presage broader weakness rent prices nationally.
5 The character and standing of the candidates seemed a presage of victory.
1 The following are a few of the accidental omens that portend ill:
2 None of these qualities would seem to portend the frenzy to come.
3 Take it, then, and perform what thy birds portend can be done.
4 All this made him uncomfortable, and seemed to portend a possible discord.
5 Atlee watched her, by no means certain what her gesture might portend .
1 Is the word of the augur at Brundisium beginning to be fulfilled?
2 How distinctly he remembered the age of the oracle and the augur !
3 All of this does not augur well for the future of the Group.
4 Bore a few augur holes in the sides of either box.
5 But this conscientious augur acts in reference to the auspices without his colleagues.
1 Aloes, without a flower, betoken long life: in flower, betoken a legacy.
2 His countenance expresses courage, and his well-set jaws betoken firmness and resolution.
3 And the simultaneous disappearance of Quast and the cats-whatdid that betoken ?
4 This plea for wings does not necessarily betoken 'a desire to depart.'
5 They betoken a new humility in Western Christianity born of experience.
1 Some observers believe there are danger signs that may foreshadow a melt-down.
2 Don't necessarily expect the outcome here to foreshadow the big one, however.
3 These papers often foreshadow where the rest of the world is going.
4 It seemed to foreshadow the relentless, inevitable approach of an endless night.
5 This could foreshadow a wider rebound in A-shares in the coming months.
1 I might be able to forebode for France, and for its ruler.
2 Yes, it surely must be the banshee, and what does it forebode ?
3 You, too, forebode that in this visit I may lose her forever?
4 Do you now foresee, do you forebode what happened?-Yourbrother came in!-
5 What these things forebode , if not disaster and ruin, 'tis hard to say.
1 By the same art he would prognosticate a principality to a scoundrel.
2 Send him out to prognosticate trouble to somebody, and he is happy.
3 When I heard these words I did prognosticate my miserie to come.
4 These criteria can be used to prognosticate and guide clinical decisions after recurrence.
5 Of the mineral wealth, it seems as yet dangerous to prognosticate .
1 The latest newspapers Redwood had did but vaguely prefigure these imminent things.
2 All three prefigure Kill Bill's central theme of wronged women seeking revenge.
3 Christ's millennial reign may prefigure the fulfillment of God's promises about Jerusalem's future.
4 And now that she could begin to sit up it did prefigure recovery.
5 Does it not prefigure the wayward and fantastic progress of a storm-tossed life?
1 Would to God I could auspicate good influences!
2 There is one thing I would mention which seems to auspicate the speedy development of the valley of the North Red River.
3 Never, surely, was a political career more impressively auspicated .
1 Each year, points vary and it's difficult to predict changes in advance.
2 However, there is currently no clear strategy to reliably predict HDACi sensitivity.
3 And right now, there's no way to predict which cases will progress.
4 Analysts now predict weeks of political horse-trading to form a new cabinet.
5 However, analysts predict that the markets will quickly discount the election results.
6 Forty years on, BBC News asked him to predict the future again.
7 It' s never good to predict the outcome of a criminal trial.
8 Conclusions: Health-related quality-of-life and self-rated health predict mortality in persons with diabetes.
9 French officials predict blockades and burning lorries on French autoroutes within days.
10 It's a complicated issue that is very difficult to predict , Fauci said.
11 Background: Reliable method to predict lymph node metastasis is not yet available.
12 Rather, we predict long relaxation times that increase exponentially with system size.
13 Russian President Vladimir Putin is hard to predict when a crisis strikes.
14 You can predict the next action of Boris Johnson's government quite easily.
15 We can't yet predict ahead of time how these cycles will change.
16 Conclusions: Six-minute walk and physical activity predict IHD event rates in PAD.
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About this term predict
Verb
Indicative · Present
Predict across language varieties