No, "suddenly" is an adverb, not a verb. It is used to describe how an action takes place.
This happens to me too, almost every day. I had to buy new curtains in the end..
What you describe is usually deja vu - one gets a sudden feeling that one has experienced something or been in a place before. The mind leaps immediately to the faulty assumption that one saw the place or event in a dream. In actuality, this is a false memory, and no such dream occurred, only the feeling of having had the dream.> The only reliable way to be certain that you have dreams that "come true," is to maintain a consistent dream journal where you record and date your dreams every single morning. In this way, if you experience deja vu, you will have a way to verify whether or not you had a predictive dream.
Abraham Lincoln had a dream a few nights before his death of him being dead and returning to the place where he lived. That's the cool part about his assassination; or before it, actually. That was his dream. And he used to watch his young dead son every night just lying in his coffin, thinking. But not thinking about his death.So my answer is no; but he did have a dream about his death a few nights before he was assassinated.
Sufficient time for her to get pregnant and have a child have passed since she was seen last. Remember not all of Ed and Al's journeys take place on screen.
This is sometimes called deja vu. It's when you have a dream and you wake up, not remembering it. But later in reality it happens, and you remember that something like that has already happened, and it's really a dream that you've forgotten.
In many instances, the belief that you have dreamt of "being here before" is the feeling of deja vu. Because your mind knows that you actually could not have been in that place physically, your mind grasps the idea that you dreamt of it. However, that is not the case; no such dream ever occurred.
I dream of jeannie took place in Cocoa Beach Florida.
"Before you echo Amen in your home or place of worship think and remember a child is listening."
Dreams seldom have specific, discernible meaning. They are our subconscious mind's way of processing and filing information. This is especially obvious if you understand that we only remember dreams that occur just before we awaken, but that we spend hours dreaming every night. It is as inaccurate to place meaning on a single dream as it is to assume that you understand a book when all you read was the last couple of pages.
Melrose Place - 1992 Suddenly Sperm 7-18 is rated/received certificates of: USA:TV-14
All dreams take place within the mind of the dreamer, just as one's thoughts take place within one's mind.