soothsay
1Soothsay — Sooth say , v. i. [Sooth + say; properly to say truth, tell the truth.] To foretell; to predict. You can not soothsay. Shak. Old soothsaying Glaucus spell. Milton. [1913 Webster] …
2Soothsay — Sooth say , n. 1. A true saying; a proverb; a prophecy. [Obs.] Spenser. [1913 Webster] 2. Omen; portent. Having [1913 Webster] God turn the same to good soothsay. Spenser. [1913 Webster] …
3soothsay — index predict, presage, prognosticate Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
4soothsay — [so͞oth′sā΄] vi. soothsaid, soothsaying Historical to make predictions; foretell soothsaying n …
5soothsay — intransitive verb see soothsaying …
6soothsay — /soohth say /, v.i., soothsaid, soothsaying. to foretell events; predict. [1600 10; back formation from SOOTHSAYER] * * * …
7soothsay — Synonyms and related words: adumbrate, augur, call, cast a horoscope, cast a nativity, divine, dope, dope out, dowse for water, forebode, forecast, foresee, foretell, fortune tell, guess, hariolate, make a prediction, make a prognosis, make a… …
8soothsay — (Roget s Thesaurus II) verb To tell about or make known (future events) by or as if by supernatural means: augur, divine, foretell, prophesy, vaticinate. See FORESIGHT …
9soothsay — v. predict future events, foretell the future …
10soothsay — sooth·say …