foreshadow
/fɔːˈʃædəʊ/ (bre, ipa) · /fɔːrˈʃædəʊ/ (ame, ipa) · /fȯr-ˈsha-(ˌ)dō/ (ame, mw)
foreshadow — 動詞
- foreshadowpresent simple I / you / we / they
- foreshadowshe / she / it
- foreshadowedpast simple
- foreshadowing-ing form
1. to show by an earlier sign that something will happen later
預示
事先顯出後來會發生的事
to show by an earlier sign that something will happen later
The sudden drop in sales foreshadowed a difficult winter for the shop.
銷售額突然下滑,預示這家店會迎來艱難的冬天。
foreshadow + later result
In chapter one, a broken watch foreshadows the family's final goodbye.
在第一章裡,一只壞掉的手錶預示這家人最後的告別。
used for story clues
Feng thought the empty seats foreshadowed a poor turnout that night.
Feng 覺得那些空位預示那晚到場的人會很少。
The judge's sharp questions foreshadowed a hard afternoon for the witness.
法官尖銳的提問,預示證人將度過艱難的下午。
That early joke about money foreshadowed the brothers' later fight.
那個早早提到錢的玩笑,預示兄弟兩人後來的爭吵。
文法句型
foreshadow + future event
foreshadow + trouble/change/result
用法筆記
Subject is usually an event, remark, image, or change that points ahead to a later result. This verb is especially common when describing stories, politics, weather, and other situations where early signs matter.