(Ancient Rome) a religious official who interpreted omens to guide public policy.
Priest in the classical Roman world, whose main role was the practice of augury.
1 Is the word of the augur at Brundisium beginning to be fulfilled?
2 How distinctly he remembered the age of the oracle and the augur !
3 All of this does not augur well for the future of the Group.
4 Bore a few augur holes in the sides of either box.
5 But this conscientious augur acts in reference to the auspices without his colleagues.
6 The prediction of the augur at Brundisium has been strikingly fulfilled.
7 Which did not augur well for the success of their marriage.
8 They said: We augur evil of thee and those with thee.
9 To obtain it, the tree is tapped by being bored with an augur .
10 This special politeness and this excess of zeal augur a particularly good lesson.
11 They cannot divine its meaning, but neither do they augur well of it.
12 They also augur the difficult geo-political tensions that may lie ahead.
13 What can I augur from it that does not clutch at my heart?
14 Picking up his scuffed leather bag, the lank-haired augur scuttled off.
15 The words of the augur at Brundisium are having in truth a strange fulfillment.
16 This may not augur well for the Irish stock market.
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