1. prescient - Adjective
2. prescient - Adjective Satellite
Having knowledge of coming events; foreseeing; conscious beforehand.
Source: Webster's dictionaryNever till this day Did life disturb the dense eternity Of joyless quiet; never skylark's song, Or storm-bird's prescient scream, or eaglet's cry, Made vital the gross fog. The very light Is but an alien that can find no welcome. Hartley Coleridge
Of course, like the consciousness behind it, behind any art, a poem can be deep or shallow, glib or visionary, prescient or stuck in an already lagging trendiness. Adrienne Rich
Simply stated, the need for accurate intelligence and prescient analysis from CIA has never been greater than it is in 2013 - or than it will be in the coming years. John O. Brennan
I've heard 14 year old meth addicted thai prostitutes say more prescient things than the woman that was supposedly a "professor. Tucker Max
extraordinarily prescient memoranda on the probable course of postwar relations Source: Internet
A dying Leto reveals his secret breeding program among the Atreides to produce a human who is invisible to prescient vision. Source: Internet