What's the difference between premonition and premunition?

Premonition


Definition:

  • (n.) Previous warning, notice, or information; forewarning; as, a premonition of danger.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) There was the time he met Steve McQueen in Cornwall in 1970 and joined him as a pillion passenger on a spontaneous four-day off-road motorbike trip, staying in "Devonshire country inns", during which bonding experience McQueen revealed to him, as he had to no one else, his violence toward his first wife, the criminality of his childhood and his premonitions of death (a story which, 40 years on, forms the basis of Steve McQueen: Living on the Edge , recently lucratively serialised in the Sunday Times ).
  • (2) Yuri's gaze turns back to the sky, peppered now with dry fallen leaves (a premonition, perhaps, of the petals cast before the viceroy in A Passage to India).
  • (3) The event begins with a premonition of what will happen from a street name.
  • (4) His distorted image presented in court reflected what some of his accusers were, and what others took to be a premonition of the fall that was coming now that sex, like an Edenic apple, had been tasted for the first time in all its polymorphous perversity.Writing of the effects of liberalising legislation on abortion, gay sex and the reduction of censorship in the 60s, Andrew Marr in A History of Modern Britain stresses this lapsarian image: "A fair verdict is that the changes allowed the British to be more openly themselves, and that while the results are not pretty, the apple of self-knowledge cannot be uneaten again and returned to the tree."
  • (5) Premonition’s technology can optimise large job sets, rerouting multiple vehicles in real-time based on a plethora of factors: changed traffic conditions, weather, delivery windows, incoming orders and returns, truck capacity, a driver’s final destination and consumer requests such as redirected parcels.
  • (6) I knew it when I read Amadeus for the first time, I knew it when I read the screenplay of Four Weddings and a Funeral (I had a premonition that I was going to be the funeral), and I knew it some years before either of those illustrious projects when in 1976 – I'd only been acting for three years – an actor friend, Richard Quick, handed me an untitled, unbound manuscript which proved to be the scabrous Sixteen Satires of Decimus Junius Juvenalis adapted into a one-man show.
  • (7) We thought it was a little film for kids: we had absolutely no premonition of the success it would have.
  • (8) Zero carbon emissions target to be enshrined in UK law Read more Premonition is working with close to a dozen Australian clients, including several “household names” with fleets in the range of 2,000-plus vehicles, according to Lorge.
  • (9) He conceded that his mother had gone a little off the rails towards the end of her life by taking up with swamis and yogis and consulting astrologers (she had premonitions, correctly, of a violent death), but she had brought him up to be agnostic and "secular", a word that in India has to bear too much hope.
  • (10) To realistically expand into this domain and have a meaningful impact, Premonition will need to expand its team of nine employees.
  • (11) Back in July, 21 Egyptian soldiers were killed in a skirmish near the Libyan border, in what some considered a premonition of what may be to come.
  • (12) Dreams as premonitions of disease have been reported since the classical era, and hypnagogic hallucinations, so named by Alfred Maury and viewed as "psychosensory hallucinations" by Baillarger in the 1840s (extending the Kantian definition of the madman as a "waking dreamer"), have been reported since the Renaissance.
  • (13) Today, mobile consumers want to be in control, they want to see and understand what’s happening with their delivery in real time, and they want more options and flexibility about when and where their delivery will arrive.” Premonition’s tools help shipping companies communicate directly with consumers and hit tighter delivery windows, with some clients providing windows inside 30 minutes.
  • (14) It shows the virgin with Christ in her lap, but it's a premonition of the Pietà .
  • (15) Various functions of the ego influence how time is experienced consciously, leading to phenomena such as déjà vu, a sensation of timelessness, misjudgment of time duration, the experience of premonition.
  • (16) Fits and coronary thrombosis, of which drivers frequently had some premonition, caused few serious accidents, although the latter was usually lethal.
  • (17) IBM is testing a robot concierge in a Hilton hotel , something that is both a gimmick and a premonition.
  • (18) I think it might have been a premonition on her part.
  • (19) He says Premonition’s approach is to think “about logistics as a service to consumers rather than just a network of trucks”.
  • (20) The wintry scene outside her window that morning, Wadley told the newsroom, had prompted a premonition: "I thought, 'the Russians really are coming'."

Premunition


Definition:

  • (n.) The act of fortifying or guarding against objections.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Hence the type of immunity which developed against this parasite is premunition and may last for life.
  • (2) Host animals exposed to low levels of infection were found to develop a strong protective immunity against subsequent lethal challenge and clinical disease even though parasites were not completely eliminated nor prevented from further establishment (premunitive immunity rather than sterile immunity).
  • (3) Lambs premunized with a relatively less pathogenic (RLP) isolate of Haemonchus contortus were challenge exposed each day with 500 3rd-stage larvae (L3) of a normally pathogenic isolate of the same worm, starting on day 9 of the premunition-induced infection.
  • (4) It is concluded that treatment with nifurtimox leads to a loss of resistance to reinfection with a large number of trypanosomes, which is maintained with challenge with a few parasites, and that these two thresholds of premunition are probably associated with humoral and cell-mediated anti-T. cruzi immune responses, respectively.
  • (5) Parasites were not completely eliminated nor prevented from further establishment, therefore the protective immunity was not sterile but rather a state of premunition.
  • (6) When used alone, immunoglobulin G from African adults who had reached a state of premunition against malaria was found to have no or very limited direct effect on invasion and multiplication of P. falciparum asexual blood stages.
  • (7) It is therefore suggested that antibody plays an important role in establishing an infection-immunity (premunition) in this system.
  • (8) Anaphylactoid 'self-cure' did not occur in this experiment but something like premunition certainly did.
  • (9) Pigeons (Columba livia) that had recovered from previous infections were susceptible to reinfection, whereas pigeons with chronic infection acquired immunity (premunition).
  • (10) New emerging atypical forms of malaria, characterized by weak parasitemia, among peoples without premunition, back from Plasmodium falciparum resistant areas, make it necessary to use rapid, sensitive, reliable methods of parasitologic diagnosis.
  • (11) Low levels of APMP in subjects susceptible to clinical manifestations of the disease and high levels in subjects in a state of premunition suggest that the results of the merozoite phagocytosis assay more closely reflect clinical immunity than do other markers of antimalarial humoral immunity.
  • (12) A 48.5% of premunition in 421 pregnant women living in the Western part of Cameroon is observed with an anti-Toxoplasma gondii indirect immunofluorescence test.
  • (13) Immunity to the intracellular protozoan, Toxoplasma gondii, in mice is of the premunition type.
  • (14) Parasitological "cure" by treatment with trypanocidal drugs led to loss of the premunition state associated with the disappearance of antibodies able to induce complement-mediated lysis or ADCC against circulating forms of T. cruzi.

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