What is a word that means “omen” but for something that has already happened? [closed]

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Just as the subject says, I'm looking for a noun that is similar in meaning to "omen," but that refers not to something that will happen, but rather to something that has already happened.



Is there something more precise than "sign?"




"Lemminkäinen’s mother receives a ___ that her son has been killed, and journeys to the underworld to resurrect him."




Note that the mother is far away from the place of her son's death, and only learns of it through a sign, or a "reverse omen," if you will.







share|improve this question














closed as unclear what you're asking by MetaEd♦ Aug 29 at 21:06


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.










  • 1




    Could you give an example sentence where this word could be used? Since 'omen' implies foreboding, it really can't apply to the past. So it's unclear how this would be used.
    – Jim Mack
    Aug 29 at 15:59






  • 1




    As Jim says, the main defining feature of an omen is that it refers to something in the future. It’s not clear to me what meaning you’re looking for if you take away the central meaning of the word you’re using as your basis. It’s a little bit like asking for an adjective with a similar meaning to purple, but without the reference to colour—there isn’t that much left for it to mean, then, unless it’s some specific property of purpleness you’re alluding to.
    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    Aug 29 at 16:04






  • 1




    @WartimeHotTot Premonition refers to an intangible sense of something occurring, without a valid & solid reference point it has, or will happen. "I was on my way to the office and had premonition that I should go the back roads instead of the highway. When I got to work, I found out the highway was closed down by a multi-car accident 15 minutes after I left my house."
    – Norman Edward
    Aug 29 at 16:21







  • 1




    I think omen is forward-looking relative to the object of the omen, but just because it happened in the past wouldn't mean it is no longer an omen. "I saw a raven on the stop sign, so I stopped. Just then, a car careened through the intersection where I would have been." That raven could be said to be an omen no matter if it all happened in the past. It wouldn't stop being an omen just because the signal and event were both in the past.
    – Andrew
    Aug 29 at 16:30






  • 1




    From the sentence you provided, something like "vision".
    – Andrew
    Aug 29 at 16:36
















up vote
5
down vote

favorite












Just as the subject says, I'm looking for a noun that is similar in meaning to "omen," but that refers not to something that will happen, but rather to something that has already happened.



Is there something more precise than "sign?"




"Lemminkäinen’s mother receives a ___ that her son has been killed, and journeys to the underworld to resurrect him."




Note that the mother is far away from the place of her son's death, and only learns of it through a sign, or a "reverse omen," if you will.







share|improve this question














closed as unclear what you're asking by MetaEd♦ Aug 29 at 21:06


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.










  • 1




    Could you give an example sentence where this word could be used? Since 'omen' implies foreboding, it really can't apply to the past. So it's unclear how this would be used.
    – Jim Mack
    Aug 29 at 15:59






  • 1




    As Jim says, the main defining feature of an omen is that it refers to something in the future. It’s not clear to me what meaning you’re looking for if you take away the central meaning of the word you’re using as your basis. It’s a little bit like asking for an adjective with a similar meaning to purple, but without the reference to colour—there isn’t that much left for it to mean, then, unless it’s some specific property of purpleness you’re alluding to.
    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    Aug 29 at 16:04






  • 1




    @WartimeHotTot Premonition refers to an intangible sense of something occurring, without a valid & solid reference point it has, or will happen. "I was on my way to the office and had premonition that I should go the back roads instead of the highway. When I got to work, I found out the highway was closed down by a multi-car accident 15 minutes after I left my house."
    – Norman Edward
    Aug 29 at 16:21







  • 1




    I think omen is forward-looking relative to the object of the omen, but just because it happened in the past wouldn't mean it is no longer an omen. "I saw a raven on the stop sign, so I stopped. Just then, a car careened through the intersection where I would have been." That raven could be said to be an omen no matter if it all happened in the past. It wouldn't stop being an omen just because the signal and event were both in the past.
    – Andrew
    Aug 29 at 16:30






  • 1




    From the sentence you provided, something like "vision".
    – Andrew
    Aug 29 at 16:36












up vote
5
down vote

favorite









up vote
5
down vote

favorite











Just as the subject says, I'm looking for a noun that is similar in meaning to "omen," but that refers not to something that will happen, but rather to something that has already happened.



Is there something more precise than "sign?"




"Lemminkäinen’s mother receives a ___ that her son has been killed, and journeys to the underworld to resurrect him."




Note that the mother is far away from the place of her son's death, and only learns of it through a sign, or a "reverse omen," if you will.







share|improve this question














Just as the subject says, I'm looking for a noun that is similar in meaning to "omen," but that refers not to something that will happen, but rather to something that has already happened.



Is there something more precise than "sign?"




"Lemminkäinen’s mother receives a ___ that her son has been killed, and journeys to the underworld to resurrect him."




Note that the mother is far away from the place of her son's death, and only learns of it through a sign, or a "reverse omen," if you will.









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Aug 29 at 16:26









bookmanu

2,489421




2,489421










asked Aug 29 at 15:43









WartimeHotTot

262




262




closed as unclear what you're asking by MetaEd♦ Aug 29 at 21:06


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.






closed as unclear what you're asking by MetaEd♦ Aug 29 at 21:06


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









  • 1




    Could you give an example sentence where this word could be used? Since 'omen' implies foreboding, it really can't apply to the past. So it's unclear how this would be used.
    – Jim Mack
    Aug 29 at 15:59






  • 1




    As Jim says, the main defining feature of an omen is that it refers to something in the future. It’s not clear to me what meaning you’re looking for if you take away the central meaning of the word you’re using as your basis. It’s a little bit like asking for an adjective with a similar meaning to purple, but without the reference to colour—there isn’t that much left for it to mean, then, unless it’s some specific property of purpleness you’re alluding to.
    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    Aug 29 at 16:04






  • 1




    @WartimeHotTot Premonition refers to an intangible sense of something occurring, without a valid & solid reference point it has, or will happen. "I was on my way to the office and had premonition that I should go the back roads instead of the highway. When I got to work, I found out the highway was closed down by a multi-car accident 15 minutes after I left my house."
    – Norman Edward
    Aug 29 at 16:21







  • 1




    I think omen is forward-looking relative to the object of the omen, but just because it happened in the past wouldn't mean it is no longer an omen. "I saw a raven on the stop sign, so I stopped. Just then, a car careened through the intersection where I would have been." That raven could be said to be an omen no matter if it all happened in the past. It wouldn't stop being an omen just because the signal and event were both in the past.
    – Andrew
    Aug 29 at 16:30






  • 1




    From the sentence you provided, something like "vision".
    – Andrew
    Aug 29 at 16:36












  • 1




    Could you give an example sentence where this word could be used? Since 'omen' implies foreboding, it really can't apply to the past. So it's unclear how this would be used.
    – Jim Mack
    Aug 29 at 15:59






  • 1




    As Jim says, the main defining feature of an omen is that it refers to something in the future. It’s not clear to me what meaning you’re looking for if you take away the central meaning of the word you’re using as your basis. It’s a little bit like asking for an adjective with a similar meaning to purple, but without the reference to colour—there isn’t that much left for it to mean, then, unless it’s some specific property of purpleness you’re alluding to.
    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    Aug 29 at 16:04






  • 1




    @WartimeHotTot Premonition refers to an intangible sense of something occurring, without a valid & solid reference point it has, or will happen. "I was on my way to the office and had premonition that I should go the back roads instead of the highway. When I got to work, I found out the highway was closed down by a multi-car accident 15 minutes after I left my house."
    – Norman Edward
    Aug 29 at 16:21







  • 1




    I think omen is forward-looking relative to the object of the omen, but just because it happened in the past wouldn't mean it is no longer an omen. "I saw a raven on the stop sign, so I stopped. Just then, a car careened through the intersection where I would have been." That raven could be said to be an omen no matter if it all happened in the past. It wouldn't stop being an omen just because the signal and event were both in the past.
    – Andrew
    Aug 29 at 16:30






  • 1




    From the sentence you provided, something like "vision".
    – Andrew
    Aug 29 at 16:36







1




1




Could you give an example sentence where this word could be used? Since 'omen' implies foreboding, it really can't apply to the past. So it's unclear how this would be used.
– Jim Mack
Aug 29 at 15:59




Could you give an example sentence where this word could be used? Since 'omen' implies foreboding, it really can't apply to the past. So it's unclear how this would be used.
– Jim Mack
Aug 29 at 15:59




1




1




As Jim says, the main defining feature of an omen is that it refers to something in the future. It’s not clear to me what meaning you’re looking for if you take away the central meaning of the word you’re using as your basis. It’s a little bit like asking for an adjective with a similar meaning to purple, but without the reference to colour—there isn’t that much left for it to mean, then, unless it’s some specific property of purpleness you’re alluding to.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
Aug 29 at 16:04




As Jim says, the main defining feature of an omen is that it refers to something in the future. It’s not clear to me what meaning you’re looking for if you take away the central meaning of the word you’re using as your basis. It’s a little bit like asking for an adjective with a similar meaning to purple, but without the reference to colour—there isn’t that much left for it to mean, then, unless it’s some specific property of purpleness you’re alluding to.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
Aug 29 at 16:04




1




1




@WartimeHotTot Premonition refers to an intangible sense of something occurring, without a valid & solid reference point it has, or will happen. "I was on my way to the office and had premonition that I should go the back roads instead of the highway. When I got to work, I found out the highway was closed down by a multi-car accident 15 minutes after I left my house."
– Norman Edward
Aug 29 at 16:21





@WartimeHotTot Premonition refers to an intangible sense of something occurring, without a valid & solid reference point it has, or will happen. "I was on my way to the office and had premonition that I should go the back roads instead of the highway. When I got to work, I found out the highway was closed down by a multi-car accident 15 minutes after I left my house."
– Norman Edward
Aug 29 at 16:21





1




1




I think omen is forward-looking relative to the object of the omen, but just because it happened in the past wouldn't mean it is no longer an omen. "I saw a raven on the stop sign, so I stopped. Just then, a car careened through the intersection where I would have been." That raven could be said to be an omen no matter if it all happened in the past. It wouldn't stop being an omen just because the signal and event were both in the past.
– Andrew
Aug 29 at 16:30




I think omen is forward-looking relative to the object of the omen, but just because it happened in the past wouldn't mean it is no longer an omen. "I saw a raven on the stop sign, so I stopped. Just then, a car careened through the intersection where I would have been." That raven could be said to be an omen no matter if it all happened in the past. It wouldn't stop being an omen just because the signal and event were both in the past.
– Andrew
Aug 29 at 16:30




1




1




From the sentence you provided, something like "vision".
– Andrew
Aug 29 at 16:36




From the sentence you provided, something like "vision".
– Andrew
Aug 29 at 16:36










5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
7
down vote













Based on the sentence you provided:



Vision




an experience of seeing someone or something in a dream or trance, or as a supernatural apparition.




Postmonition (formed by post- "after in time" and monition meaning "warning" as opposed to a premonition - future) - not a dictonary word.




dreaming something happened, after it happened, without knowing it happened.







share|improve this answer


















  • 1




    Yes, I think vision or sign will have to do. Or the sentence could be recast, mother somehow knew or felt that her son had been killed.
    – Cerberus
    Aug 29 at 17:10






  • 2




    You need to add a reference to your quotations. Which sources are you quoting ?
    – Nigel J
    Aug 29 at 21:10










  • Can you please provide source for Postmonition?
    – ubi hatt
    Aug 30 at 3:52

















up vote
2
down vote













I would recommend the word "Revelation".






share|improve this answer











We're looking for long answers that provide some explanation and context. Don't just give a one-line answer; explain why your answer is right, ideally with citations. Answers that don't include explanations may be removed.









  • 2




    I was coming to add this word as answer. Can you please flesh out the answer to provide support for why this word works? (definition, explanation, etc)
    – Mr.Mindor
    Aug 29 at 20:00

















up vote
0
down vote













You might recast the sentence using feeling along the lines of




"Lemminkäinen’s mother had an uneasy/nasty/distressing/alarming/enraging feeling that her son has been killed..."




You can have a feeling that something has happened (in the past), something is happening (now), or something is going to happen (in the future).






share|improve this answer



























    up vote
    0
    down vote













    I am still not clear that the person who received such omen is a clairvoyant or just a normal person without any supernatural power? Also, the word omen is neutral. There can be good omen or bad omen. But, it can be inferred from the example sentence, that it is a bad omen.



    If a person is clairvoyant, then clairvoyance (noun) is the word OP is looking for. Clairvoyance is the ability or natural gift that can help you look into the future as well as past.



    https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/clairvoyance




    the power or faculty of discerning objects not present to the senses or ability to perceive matters beyond the range of ordinary perception.




    E.g.




    People who claim to have clairvoyance are sometimes asked to help locate missing persons.




    In above example, people who are clairvoyant can locate already missing person. It clearly indicates, that the event of a person missing already happened in the past.



    On the other hand, if a person do not have any special supernatural ability, then I will call such a bad omen as a whisper in the heart.






    share|improve this answer


















    • 4




      The question asks for a word that "refers... to something that has already happened." Possibly misread?
      – tmgr
      Aug 29 at 17:24










    • @tmgr thanks! you are right. I completely missed the past thingy. Now, I am more confuse about what OP is looking for.
      – ubi hatt
      Aug 30 at 4:25


















    up vote
    -3
    down vote













    Intuition might be a possibility. It really depends on how she is receiving the message. The mother's intuition told her...






    share|improve this answer
















    • 2




      Welcome to English Language & Usage. We like to see answers with solid explanations and authoritative references. Perhaps you could edit your answer to provide more detail and some links to support it? Also, you might want to take the site tour and read through the help center.
      – Roger Sinasohn
      Aug 29 at 20:24










    • I would add that the verb form "intuit" is a not-as-common but still recognizable usage.
      – feelinferrety
      Aug 29 at 21:09

















    5 Answers
    5






    active

    oldest

    votes








    5 Answers
    5






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    7
    down vote













    Based on the sentence you provided:



    Vision




    an experience of seeing someone or something in a dream or trance, or as a supernatural apparition.




    Postmonition (formed by post- "after in time" and monition meaning "warning" as opposed to a premonition - future) - not a dictonary word.




    dreaming something happened, after it happened, without knowing it happened.







    share|improve this answer


















    • 1




      Yes, I think vision or sign will have to do. Or the sentence could be recast, mother somehow knew or felt that her son had been killed.
      – Cerberus
      Aug 29 at 17:10






    • 2




      You need to add a reference to your quotations. Which sources are you quoting ?
      – Nigel J
      Aug 29 at 21:10










    • Can you please provide source for Postmonition?
      – ubi hatt
      Aug 30 at 3:52














    up vote
    7
    down vote













    Based on the sentence you provided:



    Vision




    an experience of seeing someone or something in a dream or trance, or as a supernatural apparition.




    Postmonition (formed by post- "after in time" and monition meaning "warning" as opposed to a premonition - future) - not a dictonary word.




    dreaming something happened, after it happened, without knowing it happened.







    share|improve this answer


















    • 1




      Yes, I think vision or sign will have to do. Or the sentence could be recast, mother somehow knew or felt that her son had been killed.
      – Cerberus
      Aug 29 at 17:10






    • 2




      You need to add a reference to your quotations. Which sources are you quoting ?
      – Nigel J
      Aug 29 at 21:10










    • Can you please provide source for Postmonition?
      – ubi hatt
      Aug 30 at 3:52












    up vote
    7
    down vote










    up vote
    7
    down vote









    Based on the sentence you provided:



    Vision




    an experience of seeing someone or something in a dream or trance, or as a supernatural apparition.




    Postmonition (formed by post- "after in time" and monition meaning "warning" as opposed to a premonition - future) - not a dictonary word.




    dreaming something happened, after it happened, without knowing it happened.







    share|improve this answer














    Based on the sentence you provided:



    Vision




    an experience of seeing someone or something in a dream or trance, or as a supernatural apparition.




    Postmonition (formed by post- "after in time" and monition meaning "warning" as opposed to a premonition - future) - not a dictonary word.




    dreaming something happened, after it happened, without knowing it happened.








    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Aug 30 at 3:50

























    answered Aug 29 at 16:53









    Andrew

    2601212




    2601212







    • 1




      Yes, I think vision or sign will have to do. Or the sentence could be recast, mother somehow knew or felt that her son had been killed.
      – Cerberus
      Aug 29 at 17:10






    • 2




      You need to add a reference to your quotations. Which sources are you quoting ?
      – Nigel J
      Aug 29 at 21:10










    • Can you please provide source for Postmonition?
      – ubi hatt
      Aug 30 at 3:52












    • 1




      Yes, I think vision or sign will have to do. Or the sentence could be recast, mother somehow knew or felt that her son had been killed.
      – Cerberus
      Aug 29 at 17:10






    • 2




      You need to add a reference to your quotations. Which sources are you quoting ?
      – Nigel J
      Aug 29 at 21:10










    • Can you please provide source for Postmonition?
      – ubi hatt
      Aug 30 at 3:52







    1




    1




    Yes, I think vision or sign will have to do. Or the sentence could be recast, mother somehow knew or felt that her son had been killed.
    – Cerberus
    Aug 29 at 17:10




    Yes, I think vision or sign will have to do. Or the sentence could be recast, mother somehow knew or felt that her son had been killed.
    – Cerberus
    Aug 29 at 17:10




    2




    2




    You need to add a reference to your quotations. Which sources are you quoting ?
    – Nigel J
    Aug 29 at 21:10




    You need to add a reference to your quotations. Which sources are you quoting ?
    – Nigel J
    Aug 29 at 21:10












    Can you please provide source for Postmonition?
    – ubi hatt
    Aug 30 at 3:52




    Can you please provide source for Postmonition?
    – ubi hatt
    Aug 30 at 3:52












    up vote
    2
    down vote













    I would recommend the word "Revelation".






    share|improve this answer











    We're looking for long answers that provide some explanation and context. Don't just give a one-line answer; explain why your answer is right, ideally with citations. Answers that don't include explanations may be removed.









    • 2




      I was coming to add this word as answer. Can you please flesh out the answer to provide support for why this word works? (definition, explanation, etc)
      – Mr.Mindor
      Aug 29 at 20:00














    up vote
    2
    down vote













    I would recommend the word "Revelation".






    share|improve this answer











    We're looking for long answers that provide some explanation and context. Don't just give a one-line answer; explain why your answer is right, ideally with citations. Answers that don't include explanations may be removed.









    • 2




      I was coming to add this word as answer. Can you please flesh out the answer to provide support for why this word works? (definition, explanation, etc)
      – Mr.Mindor
      Aug 29 at 20:00












    up vote
    2
    down vote










    up vote
    2
    down vote









    I would recommend the word "Revelation".






    share|improve this answer












    I would recommend the word "Revelation".







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Aug 29 at 19:31









    Kemuel Sanchez

    451




    451



    We're looking for long answers that provide some explanation and context. Don't just give a one-line answer; explain why your answer is right, ideally with citations. Answers that don't include explanations may be removed.




    We're looking for long answers that provide some explanation and context. Don't just give a one-line answer; explain why your answer is right, ideally with citations. Answers that don't include explanations may be removed.








    • 2




      I was coming to add this word as answer. Can you please flesh out the answer to provide support for why this word works? (definition, explanation, etc)
      – Mr.Mindor
      Aug 29 at 20:00












    • 2




      I was coming to add this word as answer. Can you please flesh out the answer to provide support for why this word works? (definition, explanation, etc)
      – Mr.Mindor
      Aug 29 at 20:00







    2




    2




    I was coming to add this word as answer. Can you please flesh out the answer to provide support for why this word works? (definition, explanation, etc)
    – Mr.Mindor
    Aug 29 at 20:00




    I was coming to add this word as answer. Can you please flesh out the answer to provide support for why this word works? (definition, explanation, etc)
    – Mr.Mindor
    Aug 29 at 20:00










    up vote
    0
    down vote













    You might recast the sentence using feeling along the lines of




    "Lemminkäinen’s mother had an uneasy/nasty/distressing/alarming/enraging feeling that her son has been killed..."




    You can have a feeling that something has happened (in the past), something is happening (now), or something is going to happen (in the future).






    share|improve this answer
























      up vote
      0
      down vote













      You might recast the sentence using feeling along the lines of




      "Lemminkäinen’s mother had an uneasy/nasty/distressing/alarming/enraging feeling that her son has been killed..."




      You can have a feeling that something has happened (in the past), something is happening (now), or something is going to happen (in the future).






      share|improve this answer






















        up vote
        0
        down vote










        up vote
        0
        down vote









        You might recast the sentence using feeling along the lines of




        "Lemminkäinen’s mother had an uneasy/nasty/distressing/alarming/enraging feeling that her son has been killed..."




        You can have a feeling that something has happened (in the past), something is happening (now), or something is going to happen (in the future).






        share|improve this answer












        You might recast the sentence using feeling along the lines of




        "Lemminkäinen’s mother had an uneasy/nasty/distressing/alarming/enraging feeling that her son has been killed..."




        You can have a feeling that something has happened (in the past), something is happening (now), or something is going to happen (in the future).







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Aug 29 at 18:32









        Dan

        14.5k32056




        14.5k32056




















            up vote
            0
            down vote













            I am still not clear that the person who received such omen is a clairvoyant or just a normal person without any supernatural power? Also, the word omen is neutral. There can be good omen or bad omen. But, it can be inferred from the example sentence, that it is a bad omen.



            If a person is clairvoyant, then clairvoyance (noun) is the word OP is looking for. Clairvoyance is the ability or natural gift that can help you look into the future as well as past.



            https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/clairvoyance




            the power or faculty of discerning objects not present to the senses or ability to perceive matters beyond the range of ordinary perception.




            E.g.




            People who claim to have clairvoyance are sometimes asked to help locate missing persons.




            In above example, people who are clairvoyant can locate already missing person. It clearly indicates, that the event of a person missing already happened in the past.



            On the other hand, if a person do not have any special supernatural ability, then I will call such a bad omen as a whisper in the heart.






            share|improve this answer


















            • 4




              The question asks for a word that "refers... to something that has already happened." Possibly misread?
              – tmgr
              Aug 29 at 17:24










            • @tmgr thanks! you are right. I completely missed the past thingy. Now, I am more confuse about what OP is looking for.
              – ubi hatt
              Aug 30 at 4:25















            up vote
            0
            down vote













            I am still not clear that the person who received such omen is a clairvoyant or just a normal person without any supernatural power? Also, the word omen is neutral. There can be good omen or bad omen. But, it can be inferred from the example sentence, that it is a bad omen.



            If a person is clairvoyant, then clairvoyance (noun) is the word OP is looking for. Clairvoyance is the ability or natural gift that can help you look into the future as well as past.



            https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/clairvoyance




            the power or faculty of discerning objects not present to the senses or ability to perceive matters beyond the range of ordinary perception.




            E.g.




            People who claim to have clairvoyance are sometimes asked to help locate missing persons.




            In above example, people who are clairvoyant can locate already missing person. It clearly indicates, that the event of a person missing already happened in the past.



            On the other hand, if a person do not have any special supernatural ability, then I will call such a bad omen as a whisper in the heart.






            share|improve this answer


















            • 4




              The question asks for a word that "refers... to something that has already happened." Possibly misread?
              – tmgr
              Aug 29 at 17:24










            • @tmgr thanks! you are right. I completely missed the past thingy. Now, I am more confuse about what OP is looking for.
              – ubi hatt
              Aug 30 at 4:25













            up vote
            0
            down vote










            up vote
            0
            down vote









            I am still not clear that the person who received such omen is a clairvoyant or just a normal person without any supernatural power? Also, the word omen is neutral. There can be good omen or bad omen. But, it can be inferred from the example sentence, that it is a bad omen.



            If a person is clairvoyant, then clairvoyance (noun) is the word OP is looking for. Clairvoyance is the ability or natural gift that can help you look into the future as well as past.



            https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/clairvoyance




            the power or faculty of discerning objects not present to the senses or ability to perceive matters beyond the range of ordinary perception.




            E.g.




            People who claim to have clairvoyance are sometimes asked to help locate missing persons.




            In above example, people who are clairvoyant can locate already missing person. It clearly indicates, that the event of a person missing already happened in the past.



            On the other hand, if a person do not have any special supernatural ability, then I will call such a bad omen as a whisper in the heart.






            share|improve this answer














            I am still not clear that the person who received such omen is a clairvoyant or just a normal person without any supernatural power? Also, the word omen is neutral. There can be good omen or bad omen. But, it can be inferred from the example sentence, that it is a bad omen.



            If a person is clairvoyant, then clairvoyance (noun) is the word OP is looking for. Clairvoyance is the ability or natural gift that can help you look into the future as well as past.



            https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/clairvoyance




            the power or faculty of discerning objects not present to the senses or ability to perceive matters beyond the range of ordinary perception.




            E.g.




            People who claim to have clairvoyance are sometimes asked to help locate missing persons.




            In above example, people who are clairvoyant can locate already missing person. It clearly indicates, that the event of a person missing already happened in the past.



            On the other hand, if a person do not have any special supernatural ability, then I will call such a bad omen as a whisper in the heart.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Aug 30 at 5:40

























            answered Aug 29 at 17:12









            ubi hatt

            2,194319




            2,194319







            • 4




              The question asks for a word that "refers... to something that has already happened." Possibly misread?
              – tmgr
              Aug 29 at 17:24










            • @tmgr thanks! you are right. I completely missed the past thingy. Now, I am more confuse about what OP is looking for.
              – ubi hatt
              Aug 30 at 4:25













            • 4




              The question asks for a word that "refers... to something that has already happened." Possibly misread?
              – tmgr
              Aug 29 at 17:24










            • @tmgr thanks! you are right. I completely missed the past thingy. Now, I am more confuse about what OP is looking for.
              – ubi hatt
              Aug 30 at 4:25








            4




            4




            The question asks for a word that "refers... to something that has already happened." Possibly misread?
            – tmgr
            Aug 29 at 17:24




            The question asks for a word that "refers... to something that has already happened." Possibly misread?
            – tmgr
            Aug 29 at 17:24












            @tmgr thanks! you are right. I completely missed the past thingy. Now, I am more confuse about what OP is looking for.
            – ubi hatt
            Aug 30 at 4:25





            @tmgr thanks! you are right. I completely missed the past thingy. Now, I am more confuse about what OP is looking for.
            – ubi hatt
            Aug 30 at 4:25











            up vote
            -3
            down vote













            Intuition might be a possibility. It really depends on how she is receiving the message. The mother's intuition told her...






            share|improve this answer
















            • 2




              Welcome to English Language & Usage. We like to see answers with solid explanations and authoritative references. Perhaps you could edit your answer to provide more detail and some links to support it? Also, you might want to take the site tour and read through the help center.
              – Roger Sinasohn
              Aug 29 at 20:24










            • I would add that the verb form "intuit" is a not-as-common but still recognizable usage.
              – feelinferrety
              Aug 29 at 21:09














            up vote
            -3
            down vote













            Intuition might be a possibility. It really depends on how she is receiving the message. The mother's intuition told her...






            share|improve this answer
















            • 2




              Welcome to English Language & Usage. We like to see answers with solid explanations and authoritative references. Perhaps you could edit your answer to provide more detail and some links to support it? Also, you might want to take the site tour and read through the help center.
              – Roger Sinasohn
              Aug 29 at 20:24










            • I would add that the verb form "intuit" is a not-as-common but still recognizable usage.
              – feelinferrety
              Aug 29 at 21:09












            up vote
            -3
            down vote










            up vote
            -3
            down vote









            Intuition might be a possibility. It really depends on how she is receiving the message. The mother's intuition told her...






            share|improve this answer












            Intuition might be a possibility. It really depends on how she is receiving the message. The mother's intuition told her...







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Aug 29 at 19:40









            Jeff Davis

            1




            1







            • 2




              Welcome to English Language & Usage. We like to see answers with solid explanations and authoritative references. Perhaps you could edit your answer to provide more detail and some links to support it? Also, you might want to take the site tour and read through the help center.
              – Roger Sinasohn
              Aug 29 at 20:24










            • I would add that the verb form "intuit" is a not-as-common but still recognizable usage.
              – feelinferrety
              Aug 29 at 21:09












            • 2




              Welcome to English Language & Usage. We like to see answers with solid explanations and authoritative references. Perhaps you could edit your answer to provide more detail and some links to support it? Also, you might want to take the site tour and read through the help center.
              – Roger Sinasohn
              Aug 29 at 20:24










            • I would add that the verb form "intuit" is a not-as-common but still recognizable usage.
              – feelinferrety
              Aug 29 at 21:09







            2




            2




            Welcome to English Language & Usage. We like to see answers with solid explanations and authoritative references. Perhaps you could edit your answer to provide more detail and some links to support it? Also, you might want to take the site tour and read through the help center.
            – Roger Sinasohn
            Aug 29 at 20:24




            Welcome to English Language & Usage. We like to see answers with solid explanations and authoritative references. Perhaps you could edit your answer to provide more detail and some links to support it? Also, you might want to take the site tour and read through the help center.
            – Roger Sinasohn
            Aug 29 at 20:24












            I would add that the verb form "intuit" is a not-as-common but still recognizable usage.
            – feelinferrety
            Aug 29 at 21:09




            I would add that the verb form "intuit" is a not-as-common but still recognizable usage.
            – feelinferrety
            Aug 29 at 21:09


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