|
au·gur (ô g r)n.1. One of a group of ancient Roman religious officials who foretold events by observing and interpreting signs and omens. 2. A seer or prophet; a soothsayer. v. au·gured, au·gur·ing, au·gurs v.tr.1. To predict, especially from signs or omens; foretell. See Synonyms at foretell. 2. To serve as an omen of; betoken: trends that augur change in society. v.intr.1. To make predictions from signs or omens. 2. To be a sign or omen: A smooth dress rehearsal augured well for the play.
[Middle English, from Latin; see aug- in Indo-European roots.]
|
augur Verb to be a good or bad sign of future events: a double fault on the opening point did not augur well [Latin: diviner of omens]
ThesaurusLegend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms | Noun | 1. | augur - (ancient Rome) a religious official who interpreted omens to guide public policyantiquity - the historic period preceding the Middle Ages in Europe | | Verb | 1. | augur - indicate by signs; "These signs bode bad news"auspicate, bode, omen, portend, foreshadow, presage, prognosticate, predict, prefigure, betoken, forecast, foretell threaten - to be a menacing indication of something:"The clouds threaten rain"; "Danger threatens" bespeak, betoken, indicate, signal, point - be a signal for or a symptom of; "These symptoms indicate a serious illness"; "Her behavior points to a severe neurosis"; "The economic indicators signal that the euro is undervalued" foreshow - foretell by divine inspiration | | 2. | augur - predict from an omen |
augur verb bode, promise, predict, herald, signify, foreshadow, prophesy, harbinger, presage, prefigure, portend, betoken, be an omen of
Translations augur [ˈɔːgəʳ] vi it augurs well → es de buen agüero augur [ˈɔːgəʳ] vt (= be a sign of) → predirevi it augurs well → promette bene
|
|