0 to show or suggest that something, often something unpleasant, will happen: --
Results are discussed as highlighting a pathway by which difficulties attaining autonomy in adolescence may presage the development of long-term difficulties in social functioning.
Could such a discourse be all-embracing, and presage a change?
On the one hand, he presaged late nineteenth-century liberalism by rejecting dogma and insisting that theological language was too imprecise to capture theological truth.
Dispositional features such as low self-esteem and poor coping have been frequently implicated to presage adolescent substance use.
There was little about the election result that presaged the end of the imperial connection.
The creation and expansion of parcel post would take almost exactly the form he presaged.
First, the use of labels to designate particular types of material presages the principle of stylistically heterogeneous topoi to create blocks of structure.
Many miracules reported that the cure was presaged by great pain.