In this alertness she is a contrast to a modern seeress, subject, like her, to monitions of an hallucinatory kind, but subject during intervals of somnambulisme.
These monitions to Jack were written while his father was in Scotland in 1795.
The practical monitions are plain enough which declare that on our dealings with matter depend our weal or woe, physical and moral.
Through our neglect of the monitions of a reasonable Materialism, we sin and suffer daily.
The country would be grey and leafless there; here there were already monitions of Spring.
The trees were leafless now, and there were still ridges of snow to be seen among the hills, but already there were monitions of Spring in the air.
But the secret is an open one--the practical monitions are plain enough, which declare that on our dealings with matter depend our weal and woe, physical and moral.
Through our neglect of themonitions of a reasonable materialism we sin and suffer daily.
A powerful effect was produced by the elegant luxury of the former, and by the sacred and solemn monitions of the latter.
Not by the noble monitions of Nature, but by the ignoble, is a man much tempted to publish the secret of his soul in words.
Fear alone made him drive back and quell the monitions that sprang from within, for O, if they were only vain hopes could he survive the disappointment?
O, most Holy and Revered Father, tell me, am I wrong in not listening to the monitions that are racking my inmost being?
The shadows of the night were deep, and silence brooded within them, and the ears thrilled and tingled to the monitions of its voiceless sea.
But when we are considering monitions given in more recent times it will be well to remember that it is in this direction that some supernormal extension of knowledge seems possibly traceable.
We have seen that there is a continuous transition from experimental to spontaneous telepathy; from our transferred pictures of cards to monitions of a friend's death at a distance.
These monitions may indeed be pictures of the dying friend, but they are seldom such pictures as the decedent's brain seems likely to project in the form in which they reach the percipient.
Here, again, we are reminded of the general character of the monitions of Socrates.
The man who should provide for our Lord's infancy must be a man, in the nature of the case, who was receptive of spiritual monitions and devoted to the will of God.
And how tenderly do the ancient prophets also attune their monitions to the promptings of the richest and purest of human sympathies.
The language in which Socrates or his disciples spoke of its monitions lent itself to different interpretations.
He used to follow the monitionsof a German sorceress.
Kaiser would let go the hold; but kept Jagerndorf fast clenched, deaf to all pleadings, and monitions of gods or men.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "monitions" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.