Premonition
mid 16th century (in the sense ‘advance warning’): from French prémonition, from late Latin praemonitio(n- ), from Latin praemonere, from prae ‘before’ + monere ‘warn’.
wiktionary
Mid 15th century, from Anglo-Norman premunition, from Ecclesiastical Latin praemonitiōnem(“a forewarning”), form of praemonitiō, from Latin praemonitus, past participle of praemoneō, from prae(“before”) (English pre-) + moneō(“to warn”) (from which English monitor). [1]
Compare Germanic forewarning.
etymonline
premonition (n.)
mid-15c., premunicion, premunition, "preliminary warning, previous notification or admonishment," from Anglo-French premunition (late 14c.), Old French premonicion, from Medieval Latin praemonitionem (nominative praemonitio) "a forewarning," noun of action from past-participle stem of Latin praemonere "forewarn," from prae "before" (see pre-) + monere "to admonish, warn, advise," from PIE *moneie- "to make think of, remind," suffixed (causative) form of root *men- (1) "to think."