the.com/premonitory
The gut's early warning system, filing the report before your brain reads it.
means Serving as a warning or sign that something, usually unpleasant, is about to happen.
from From Latin praemonere, to warn beforehand, stitching prae (before) to monere (to warn) — the same root that gives us monster and monitor, both originally things that warned.
Medical usePremonitory symptoms precede full-blown migraines by hours.
Sibling wordShares monere with admonish and premonition.
ToneAlmost always braces you for bad news.