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May 28, 2026
This week’s theme
A lexical daisy chain

This week’s words
caudillo
confect
incalescent
premonitory

premonitory
Approaching Thunder Storm, 1859
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premonitory

PRONUNCIATION:
(pri-MAH-nuh-tor-ee)

MEANING:
adjective: Serving as a warning or sign of something to come, especially something unpleasant.

ETYMOLOGY:
From Latin praemonere, from prae (before) + monere (warn). Earliest documented use: 1647.

USAGE:
“The sultry and incalescent weather of yesterday betokens the inauguration of ‘heated term’ in earnest. ... Shortly after 5 o’clock, a perceptible and acceptable change occurred in the temperature premonitory of the fall of a protracted shower.”
The Weather Yesterday; The New York Times; May 27, 1869.

See more usage examples of premonitory in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary.

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
We love those who know the worst of us and don't turn their faces away. -Walker Percy, author (28 May 1916-1990)

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