OMINOUSNESS - ορισμός. Τι είναι το OMINOUSNESS
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Τι (ποιος) είναι OMINOUSNESS - ορισμός

PHENOMENON THAT IS BELIEVED TO FORETELL THE FUTURE
Omens; Portent (divination); Omenous; Portents; Ominousness; Prodigy (divination); Ill omen; Bad omen; Ominous
  • National Geographic]]'' translated it in a 1966 article about the tapestry as "These men wonder at the star".
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ominous         
If you describe something as ominous, you mean that it worries you because it makes you think that something unpleasant is going to happen.
There was an ominous silence at the other end of the phone...
ADJ
ominously
The bar seemed ominously quiet...
Ominously, car sales slumped in August...
ADV: ADV adj, ADV with cl, ADV with v
Ominous         
·adj Of or pertaining to an omen or to omens; being or exhibiting an omen; significant; portentous;
- formerly used both in a favorable and unfavorable sense; now chiefly in the latter; foreboding or foreshowing evil; inauspicious; as, an ominous dread.
ominous         
a.
Portentous, monitory, premonitory, inauspicious, unpropitious.

Βικιπαίδεια

Omen

An omen (also called portent) is a phenomenon that is believed to foretell the future, often signifying the advent of change. It was commonly believed in ancient times, and still believed by some today, that omens bring divine messages from the gods.

These omens include natural phenomena, for example an eclipse, abnormal births of animals (especially humans) and behaviour of the sacrificial lamb on its way to the slaughter. Specialists, known as diviners, variously existed to interpret these omens. They would also use an artificial method, for example, a clay model of a sheep liver, to communicate with their gods in times of crisis. They would expect a binary answer, either yes or no, favourable or unfavourable. They did these to predict what would happen in the future and to take action to avoid disaster.

Though the word omen is usually devoid of reference to the change's nature, hence being possibly either "good" or "bad", the term is more often used in a foreboding sense, as with the word ominous. The word comes from its Latin equivalent omen, of otherwise uncertain origin.

Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για OMINOUSNESS
1. Even the thumping ominousness of the score is kept to a minimum. (The workaday sounds that we hear are so much more unsettling.) "United '3" is about as far from a movie like "Airport" as you can get.
2. "That really bothered him –– where it came from –– and also, he was afraid he had gone beyond his audience," Guralnick says. (Cooke held off on recording the song for months; it wasn‘t released until after his death.) "He knew it was a song he had to record, but he said he was never going to sing it [live]." (He did, but not much.) His friend Bobby Womack felt something else, an ominousness.