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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for February 13, 2010 is:
prescience \PRESH-ee-unss\ noun
a : foreknowledge of events:
b : divine omniscience
c : human anticipation of the course of events : foresight
Examples:
Stacy had the prescience to know that the stock’s value wasn’t going to remain high forever, so she sold it before it decreased.
Did you know?
If you know the origin of "science," you already know half the story of "prescience." "Science" comes from the Latin verb "scire," which means "to know" and which is the source of many English words ("conscience," "conscious," and "omniscience," just to name a few). "Prescience" comes from the Latin verb "praescire," which means "to know beforehand." "Praescire" joins the verb "scire" with the prefix "prae-," a predecessor of "pre-." A lesser-known "scire"-derived word is "nescience." "Nescience" means "ignorance" and comes from "scire" plus "ne-," which means "not" in Latin.
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