From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishpresentimentpre‧sen‧ti‧ment /prɪˈzentəmənt/ noun [countable] formalPREDICT a strange feeling that something is going to happen, especially something bad SYN premonitionpresentiment of a presentiment of disaster
Examples from the Corpus
presentiment• I didn't exactly have a presentiment - certainly not of anything like this happening.• I have an intractable presentiment that I will soon start seeing them in Tod's dream.• I understood that you had had some sort of presentiment of disaster.• Since the unfortunate accident to your father, I have had the strangest presentiments concerning you, at times.• Heavy with presentiment, I turned around and walked back to my office.presentiment of• a presentiment of dangerOrigin presentiment (1700-1800) French pressentiment, from Latin praesentire “to feel before”