【Apprehension】 , 【foreboding】 , 【misgiving】 and 【presentiment】 all denote fear (or an instance of it) that something is going wrong or will go wrong.
【Apprehension】 usually implies fear that obsesses the mind and keeps one anxious and worried.
be under 【apprehension】 concerning a child’s health
peasants who have survived a famine will be perpetually haunted by memory and 【apprehension】 —Russell
【Foreboding】 particularly designates oppressive anticipatory fear or superstitious, unreasoning, or inadequately defined fear; thus, one may relieve a person’s apprehensions yet find it hard to dispel his forebodings.
there was a sadness and constraint about all persons that day, which filled Mr. Esmond with gloomy forebodings —Thackeray
【Misgiving】 suggests uneasiness and mistrust rather than anxiety or dread; it is often applied to sudden fears (as a suspicion that one is making a mistake, a doubt of one’s capacity to accomplish what one has undertaken, or a disturbing loss of courage.
in the midst of my anecdote a sudden 【misgiving】 chilled me—had I told them about this goat before? —L. P. Smith
his self-confidence had given place to a 【misgiving】 that he had been making a fool of himself — Shaw
【Presentiment】 implies a vague feeling or a dim, almost mystical, perception of something (not necessarily unpleasant) that seems bound to happen; however, because it frequently suggests an element of anticipatory fear and, in many cases, of 【foreboding】 , it comes into comparison with the other words of this group.
the delicious repose of the soul . . . had been shaken . . . and alarmed with dim 【presentiment】 —George Eliot
2017年9月30日 — misgivings, seek common ground and reduce differences through genuine dialogue. ... apprehension, a sense of foreboding. Globalization once.