Lewis Short
(v. n.P. a.) : prae-mĕtŭo, 3, v. n. and
* A.
* Neutr., to fear or be in fear beforehand (very rare): mens,Lucr. 3, 1019: Caesar praemetuens suis, fearing for, anxious about his men, * Caes. B. G. 7, 49, 1.
* Act., to fear something beforehand: poenas Danaum et deserti conjugis iras, * Verg. A. 2, 573: dum praemetuit cultus inolescere Christi, Prud. ap. Symm. 2, 681.—Hence, praemĕtŭ-ens, entis, P. a., fearing beforehand; with gen. obj.: ovis praemetuens doli,Phaedr. 1, 16, 4.—* Adv.: praemĕtŭenter, anxiously, solicitously: errorem vitare,Lucr. 4, 823.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary