the mind > mental capacity > expectation > foresight, foreknowledge > prediction, foretelling > inspired prophecy > 			[noun]		 > a prophet or seer > female
the mind > mental capacity > expectation > foresight, foreknowledge > prediction, foretelling > soothsaying > 			[noun]		 > soothsayer > female
society > faith > aspects of faith > spirituality > inspiration or revelation > prophecy > 			[noun]		 > person > female
c1350     		(Harl. 874)	 		(1961)	 18 (MED)  				Þou suffrest a womman, Iezabel, þat seiþ þat she is prophetesse, forto techen & out drawen my seruantes to leccherie.
a1393    J. Gower  		(Fairf.)	  ii. 1802  				For so my dowhter, prophetesse, fforwiþ hir litel houndes deth Betokneth.
a1425						 (c1395)						     		(Royal)	 		(1850)	 Isa. viii. 3  				Y neiȝede to the profetesse [a1382 a prophetesse]; and sche conseyuede, and childide a sone.
c1450						 (?a1400)						     		(Ashm.)	 4412  				Dame Proserpyne, a prophetese of ȝoure praysid laȝes.
c1500						 (?a1475)						     		(1896)	 1589 (MED)  				The nobyll prophetyssa, Sybyll, men hyr call.
1579    W. Fulke Heskins Parl. Repealed in   29  				The prophetesses of the olde lawe.
1625    K. Long tr.  J. Barclay   i. xx. 64  				When she had vttered many things in this Propheticke fury,..she resembled a true possest Prophetesse.
1651    T. Hobbes   iii. xl. 256  				Hulda the Prophetesse had the Supreme authority in matter of Religion.
1705    J. Beaumont  284  				Consulting the old Fate-telling Cumœan Sibyl, call'd the Prophetess of Hell.
1763    J. Brown  x. 180  				Miriam, a distinguished Prophetess.
1817    P. B. Shelley   ix. xx. 203  				Cythna shall be the prophetess of love.
a1855    C. Brontë  		(1857)	 I. xv. 252  				The king was met by a Highland woman, calling herself a prophetess; she..cried.., ‘My lord the king, if you pass this water you will never return again alive!’
1882    W. Smith  & H. Wace  III. 936/1  				The frenzied utterances of the Montanistic prophetesses.
1915    V. Woolf  xxi. 353  				‘What can I tell you?’ Helen reflected, speaking more to herself..than as a prophetess delivering a message.
1942     10 Nov. 12/8  				Norns..were said to appear as prophetesses at the birth of children.
1990    L. Picknett  65/1  				The fifteenth-century Yorkshire prophetess Mother Shipton..allegedly put it [sc. the end of the world] in 1991.