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auspicious
[aw-spish-uhs]
adjective
promising success; propitious; opportune; favorable.
an auspicious occasion.
favored by fortune; prosperous; fortunate.
auspicious
/ ɔːˈspɪʃəs /
adjective
favourable or propitious
archaic, prosperous or fortunate
Usage
Other Word Forms
- auspiciously adverb
- auspiciousness noun
- unauspicious adjective
- unauspiciously adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of auspicious1
Example Sentences
Not an auspicious beginning to an hour-long conversation with England’s loudest and most punctual band.
Frustrating results that overshadowed an otherwise auspicious day.
The protests were auspicious, with an estimated 5 million people participating in 2,100 gatherings nationwide.
Agathe’s vomiting on Oliver's shoes is not an auspicious start, nor is calling him “unbearable, arrogant, and totally stuck up” within earshot.
Solomon: It’s dubious, and not very auspicious, to follow “leadership” that isn’t leading.
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