预感
含义
A premonition; a presentiment; to have a gut feeling about something before it happens. An intuitive sense that something (often significant) is about to occur.
Can be used as both verb (预感到 — to have a premonition of) and noun (一种预感 — a premonition). Unlike 预测 (prediction based on analysis) or 预见 (foresight based on reasoning), 预感 is intuitive and non-rational — it is a feeling, not a calculation. Often carries a slightly ominous connotation, though it can also describe positive anticipatory feelings.
例句
- 会议结束后,她有强烈预感,公司内部分歧已难以弥合。
- 这位战地记者说,长期高风险工作让他常有危险预感,而且多次被现实证明。
- 不少批评家认为,伟大悲剧之所以动人,是因为作家把对人类命运的隐秘预感写进了故事。
用法指南
语境: narrative, psychology, journalism, literary criticism
语气: reflective
正确说法
- 他在动荡岁月里总有一种预感,觉得自己站在重大历史转折的边缘。(In those turbulent years, he always had a premonition that he was standing at the edge of a major historical turning point.)
- 这部悬疑小说的高明之处,在于作者从第一章起就不断埋下不祥预感,让结局既意外又合理。(The brilliance of this suspense novel is that the author keeps planting ominous premonitions from the first chapter, making the ending both surprising and reasonable.)
错误说法
- 我预感今天会下雨 — while not wrong, 预感 for mundane weather predictions sounds overly dramatic; use 感觉 (feel like), 估计 (reckon), or 好像要下雨了 (looks like it's going to rain) for everyday casual observations
起源与历史
预 (in advance) + 感 (to feel/sense — 心heart + 咸 all/encompassing, to feel with the whole heart). Together: to feel/sense in advance.
文化背景
世代: All ages
社会背景: Universal
相关短语
闪卡、测验、音频发音和间隔重复