Why this word is great
PRESENSION — [Noun] A previous perception or a foreboding; a premonition. From Latin praesēnsiōn-, praesēnsiō, from praesentīre ("to perceive beforehand"), from prae- ("before") + sentīre ("to feel, perceive"). Unlike "premonition," which leans toward the ominously vague, or "presentiment," its more common emotional cousin, presension is the austere, scholarly name for the raw data of foresight. It is the subtle shift in air pressure before a storm, the scentless chill in a sunlit room that portends illness, or the scientist's sudden insight before the data confirms it—the mind's faint, forensic ledger of a truth the senses have not yet fully logged, proving perception is the ghost of a fact yet to come.