We have no meanings for "favourable auspices" in our records yet.
1 Nor on these occasions was Lady Theresa seen under less favourable auspices .
2 Thus the campaign of 1632 opened under the most favourable auspices .
3 The voyage was being accomplished under the most favourable auspices .
4 The new campaign opened under the most favourable auspices .
5 No counter revolution ever effected the change of a royal dynasty, under such favourable auspices .
6 I could have wished to enter your family, my dear father, under more favourable auspices .
7 This Fund commenced under the most favourable auspices .
8 Roland is well in health, and has sailed for Port Natal, under what he considers favourable auspices .
9 To read it one might have thought Mr. William Gum had gone out under the most favourable auspices .
10 Under such favourable auspices , it is not to be wondered at that the Saracens became a literary people.
11 Never, perhaps, was the foundation of a nation laid under such peculiarly favourable auspices as that of America.
12 At twenty- three years of age he entered the great world as King, under the most favourable auspices .
13 It was, of course, a great delight to my father to be removed to London under such favourable auspices .
14 As the nephew of Henry Jermyn, Lord St. Albans, this young simpleton was ushered into a court life with the most favourable auspices .
15 Under such favourable auspices as these, we landed shortly after eight a.m., making a bee-line for the only provision shop the place boasted.
16 He began life under highly favourable auspices ; but becoming tired of a university career, in a colony of friends to the wilds of Wermland.
Other examples for "favourable auspices"
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This collocation consists of: Favourable auspices through the time
Favourable auspices across language varieties