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View synonyms for foreshadowing

foreshadowing

[ fawr-shad-oh-ing ]

noun

  1. an indication of something that will happen in the future, often used as a literary device to hint at or allude to future plot developments:

    The gothic novel uses foreshadowing to build suspense.



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Word History and Origins

Origin of foreshadowing1

First recorded in 1845–50; foreshadow ( def ) + -ing 1( def )

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Example Sentences

In a bit of foreshadowing, he repeated that opinion in November.

“The spoon was a tool for foreshadowing,” the Facebook page explains.

In a foreshadowing of things to come, I learned that Africa is always changing.

The rise of the yeoman class in Britain was particularly critical in foreshadowing the evolution of America.

We often joke that Willa was less a name, and more foreshadowing.

In that book his grandfather and father are represented as foreshadowing the greatness of their descendant.

No less striking is His touching reference to the dark days coming, the first distinct foreshadowing of the Cross.

Men have sometimes a foreshadowing of what will come to pass without distinctly seeing it.

But there is a wondrously clear foreshadowing of that tremendous cross scene in the earliest page of this old Book.

There certainly was at present no foreshadowing of the coming separation, in his daughter's face.

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