For an employee about to be terminated, the signs can be subtle. Typically you'll notice a certain aloofness from your boss and probably your coworkers (yes, they will often know before YOU do). You'll visit the coffee machine and everyone there will stop talking or laughing and quickly find an excuse to get back to work. They may offer a polite smile as usual, but will avoid holding eye contact with you if at all possible. You may notice that your boss and coworkers aren't taking as much interest in you as before, that they no longer seek your ideas and opinions as they once did, or that you are casually left out of normal office functions and meetings.
For a contractor about to be thrown out the door, it can be much more brutal. You may be given increasingly "impossible" tasks where the specs and timetables are imprecise, confusing, or altogether wrong. Several days later you'll then be called into the manager's office, questioned, and briskly told that your performance is not meeting expectations. Perhaps you've visited the desks of certain company employees to ask questions, or maybe you've gotten into the habit of visiting the water cooler, the vending machines, or even the restrooms once or twice per day. It never bothered anyone before, but now you'll get called in and told that you've been seen "walking the halls". Or that your actions are disrupting the work of others in the office. Essentially they can trump up anything at all as an excuse to send you packing.
As for layoffs, it's mostly a case of following the money. When the payroll begins to get slow, when the managers appear distracted and short-tempered, or when the normally upbeat sales staff seems perpetually glum and dismal -- it's probably time to fire up the job-hunting radar. And of course, always beware of mergers!