The word for today is…

prognosticate (verb) – 1. To predict according to present indications or signs; foretell.
2. To foreshadow; portend.

Source : The Free Dictionary

Etymology : Prognosticate, which comes from the Greek progn?stikos (“foretelling”), first appears in English during the 15th century. Since that time, prognosticate has been connected with things that give omens or warnings of events to come and with people who can prophesy or predict the future by such signs. William Shakespeare used the “prophesy” sense of prognosticate in the sonnet that begins “Not from the stars do I my judgement pluck.” “Of thee this I prognosticate,” the Bard penned, “Thy end is truth’s and beauty’s doom and date.”

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Peter is a fourth-generation New Zealander, with his mother's and father's folks having arrived in New Zealand in the 1870s. He lives in Lower Hutt with his wife, some cats and assorted computers. His...