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- verb(augur well/badly/ill)augur (verb) · augurs (third person present) · augured (past tense) · augured (past participle) · auguring (present participle)
- (of an event or circumstance) portend a good or bad outcome:"the end of the cold war seemed to augur well" · "the return to the gold standard augured badly for industry"Similar:be a sign ofbe an indication ofbe a warning ofwarn offorewarn ofbe an omen ofbe a harbinger ofspaeauspicate
- portend or bode (a specified outcome):"a new coalition would not augur a new period of social reforms"
- archaicforesee or predict.
nounaugur (noun) · augurs (plural noun)Originlate Middle English (as a noun): from Latin, ‘diviner’. - Official divinersIn ancient Rome, augurs were official diviners whose function it was to divine whether the gods approved of a proposed undertaking, such as a military move. They did so by various means, among them observing the behavior of birds and examining the entrails of sacrificed animals.www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/augur
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