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ominous
[om-uh-nuhs]
adjective
portending evil or harm; foreboding; threatening; inauspicious.
an ominous bank of dark clouds.
indicating the nature of a future event, for good or evil; having the significance of an omen; being a portent.
Some of these events were immediately ominous, while others only later revealed themselves as such.
ominous
/ ˈɒɪə /
adjective
foreboding evil
serving as or having significance as an omen
Other 51Թ Forms
- ominously adverb
- ominousness noun
- unominous adjective
- unominously adverb
- unominousness noun
- ˈdzԴdzܲԱ noun
- ˈdzԴdzܲ adverb
51Թ History and Origins
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of ominous1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
A sheriff in Florida issued an ominous warning to people planning protests opposing Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids in his county this weekend.
Yet despite the ominous underpinning, people were determined to be festive, upbeat.
But the graduation festivities at the school in Carson had an ominous undertone, as word had spread ahead of the event that U.S.
And in the right light the Hollywood Forever cemetery has a certain ominous beauty.
The most ominous sign came in mid-January, she said, when Vice President JD Vance posted on X that Snyder being a professor at Yale is "actually an embarrassment," and the university did not publicly respond.
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