Ominous is an adjective which means giving the impression that something bad or unpleasant is going to happen; something that appears threatening. Example sentence:
It was an ominous sign when the company began a series of lay offs.
As ominous means baleful, forbidding, menacing, minacious, and so on, it is not the correct word to use in the sentence.
The president continued his speech after an ominous caesura.
The noun form is ominousness.
A low, ominous growl came from the dog. Look at those ominous clouds!
in twilight James and Victoria are very ominous.
The thick, dark, gray clouds signaled that ominous weather was on its way.
The thick, dark, gray clouds signaled that ominous weather was on its way.
There was an ominous silence as the question was asked; it seemed nobody had an answer
The near-dead lamp gave an ominous glow in the pitch-dark room.
an ominous bank of dark clouds Ominous means evil, and leads to ominously meaning evil. My source of helping you was dictionary.com glad I could help
In the book Poison, the young girl ventured into an ominous world to save her sister.The near-dead lamp gave an ominous glow in the pitch-dark room.The near-dead lamp gave an ominous glow in the pitch-dark room.
The sentence contains two adjectives: large and ominousThe other components of the sentence are:Adverb: overheadnouns: two, cloudsverb: are