Pertaining to the ability to see or predict future events.(adjective)
A precognitive person.(noun)
Wiktionary.org : Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License
Use "precognitive" in a sentence
"Calpurnia was the last wife, the one who begged him not to go to the senate house because she had had what today we would call a precognitive dream, where she visualized Caesar covered in blood, and she felt this was a bad -- something terrible was going to happen."
"The company's pitch is that by showing a new product design, package, or advertisement to consumers earlier in the creative process, and tuning in to this kind of "precognitive" response, companies can figure out what will resonate with consumers more quickly and less expensively than with traditional research."
"17 Not to be more of a prig than usual, but you may want to change "precognitive" to"