Why this word is great
TAISCH — [Noun] The involuntary ability to see the future or distant events, or the supernatural hearing of the voice of a person about to die. From Scottish Gaelic taibhs ("apparition, ghost"), it carries the spectral weight of the Highlands—a whisper from the unseen. Unlike "clairvoyance" (a broad, often willed perception of the hidden) or "premonition" (a nebulous foreboding), taisch is an unasked-for intrusion of the inevitable. It is the sudden chill of a familiar voice calling your name across empty moors, the flicker of a loved one’s face in the hearth’s dying embers, or the inexplicable scent of funeral lilies in a room where none bloom—proof that the future, like the past, is never truly gone, only waiting to be heard.