Weathermen are not always on target when they try to prospicience the weather. |
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Doubtless much of their prospicience may be due to an animal instinct that has been lost to us in the civilizing process.
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They are called the faculties of memory and divination, of respicience and prospicience, where one is conscious of one's ideas as those which would be encountered in one's past or future state. |
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It would have been unnatural, or premature, to refer to the restoration before the dispersion had taken place, provided such restoration were an object of justifiable prospicience. |
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She had suddenly remembered that she must play up to this man who held her ambitions in his hand, and she had the wit to acknowledge his prospicience. |
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In the business world today, it is the man of judgment and prospicience, of tact and intrepidity, of courage and vision, who can dictate the affairs of a city. |
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