Word Meanings - AUGURY - Book Publishers vocabulary database
1. The art or practice of foretelling events by observing the actions of birds, etc.; divination. 2. An omen; prediction; prognostication; indication of the future; presage. From their flight strange auguries she drew. Drayton. He resigned himself
Additional info about word: AUGURY
1. The art or practice of foretelling events by observing the actions of birds, etc.; divination. 2. An omen; prediction; prognostication; indication of the future; presage. From their flight strange auguries she drew. Drayton. He resigned himself . . . with a docility that gave little augury of his future greatness. Prescott. 3. A rite, ceremony, or observation of an augur.
Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of AUGURY)
- Divination
- Prediction
- sorcery
- magic
- witchcraft
- augury
- omens
- Prophecy
- prognostication
- vaticination
- foreannouncement
- premonstration
- foretelling
- forebodement
- presage
- foreshowing
- Vaticination
- divination
- prediction
Related words: (words related to AUGURY)
- MAGIC; MAGICAL
1. Pertaining to the hidden wisdom supposed to be possessed by the Magi; relating to the occult powers of nature, and the producing of effects by their agency. 2. Performed by, or proceeding from, occult and superhuman agencies; done - MAGICALLY
In a magical manner; by magic, or as if by magic. - SORCERY
Divination by the assistance, or supposed assistance, of evil spirits, or the power of commanding evil spirits; magic; necromancy; witchcraft; enchantment. Adder's wisdom I have learned, To fence my ear against thy sorceries. Milton. (more info) - WITCHCRAFT
1. The practices or art of witches; sorcery; enchantments; intercourse with evil spirits. 2. Power more than natural; irresistible influence. He hath a witchcraft Over the king in 's tongue. Shak. - PRESAGE
1. Something which foreshows or portends a future event; a prognostic; an omen; an augury. "Joy and shout -- presage of victory." Milton. 2. Power to look the future, or the exercise of that power; foreknowledge; presentiment. If there be aught - PREDICTIONAL
Prophetic; prognostic. - PRESAGEMENT
1. The act or art of presaging; a foreboding. Sir T. Browne. 2. That which is presaged, or foretold. "Ominous presagement before his end. " Sir H. Wotton. - FORETELLER
One who predicts. Boyle. - PRESAGEFUL
Full of presages; ominous. Dark in the glass of some presageful mood. Tennyson. - VATICINATION
Prediction; prophecy. It is not a false utterance; it is a true, though an impetuous, vaticination. I. Taylor. - FORETELL
To predict; to tell before occurence; to prophesy; to foreshow. Deeds then undone my faithful tongue foretold. Pope. Prodigies, foretelling the future eminence and luster of his character. C. Middleton. Syn. -- To predict; prophesy; prognosticate; - PROPHECY
A book of prophecies; a history; as, the prophecy of Ahijah. 2 Chron. ix. 29. 3. Public interpretation of Scripture; preaching; exhortation or instruction. (more info) 1. A declaration of something to come; a foretelling; a prediction; esp., an - PREMONSTRATION
A showing beforehand; foreshowing. - FOREBODEMENT
The act of foreboding; the thing foreboded. - AUGURY
1. The art or practice of foretelling events by observing the actions of birds, etc.; divination. 2. An omen; prediction; prognostication; indication of the future; presage. From their flight strange auguries she drew. Drayton. He resigned himself - DIVINATION
1. The act of divining; a foreseeing or foretelling of future events; the pretended art discovering secret or future by preternatural means. There shall not be found among you any one that . . . useth divination, or an observer of times, or an - MAGIC
A comprehensive name for all of the pretended arts which claim to produce effects by the assistance of supernatural beings, or departed spirits, or by a mastery of secret forces in nature attained by a study of occult science, including enchantment, - FORESHOW
To show or exhibit beforehand; to give foreknowledge of; to prognosticate; to foretell. Your looks foreshow You have a gentle heart. Shak. Next, like Aurora, Spenser rose, Whose purple blush the day foreshows. Denham. - MAGICIAN
One skilled in magic; one who practices the black art; an enchanter; a necromancer; a sorcerer or sorceress; a conjurer. - PRESAGER
One who, or that which, presages; a foreteller; a foreboder. Shak.