commonition

English

Etymology

From Latin commonitio. See monition.

Noun

commonition (plural commonitions)

  1. (archaic) advice, warning, or instruction.
    • 17th C., John Donne, Sermon XC. Preached at the Churching of the Countess of Bridgewater[1]:
      as they appertain to all succeeding ages, and to us, so they are a commonition, an alarm, to raise us from the sleep, and death of sin
    • 2006, Paul Vela, Sealed With a Kiss[2]:
      Daryll Smoot's sermonizing didn't begin and end with nightly commonitions

References