auspice如何读

英:['ɔ:spɪs]

美:[ˈɔspɪs]

auspice是什么意思

n.

预兆

前兆

吉兆

(以飞鸟行动为根据的)占卜

auspice自然拼读

aus·pice

aw spihs

auspice变形

复数:auspices

auspice词根

词根:auspice

adj.

auspicious 吉兆的,吉利的;幸运的

adv.

auspiciously 吉祥地;吉兆地;繁荣昌盛地

n.

auspiciousness 吉兆;兴盛;幸运

auspice英英释义

noun

(usu. pl.) sponsorship or protection; patronage.The nuclear weapons inspectors carried out their work under the auspices of their respective governments.

(often pl.) an omen or sign of the future, esp. one taken as favorable.

the practice of predicting the future or obtaining hidden knowledge by interpreting omens, esp. those derived from the observation of birds.

auspice词组

under the auspices of由…赞助或主办,在……保护下;在…的主持下;在…保护下

auspice词源英文解释

Latin auspicium, from auspic-, auspex diviner by birds, from avis bird + specere to look, look at — more at aviary, spy

The first known use of auspice was in 1533

auspice儿童词典英英释义

austeritynoun

the quality or state of being austere

an austere act, manner, or attitude

a way of living with few or no luxuries

austereadjective

stern and unfriendly in appearance and manner

living a harsh life with few pleasures : ascetic

simple sense 4a, unadorned

an austere room

austereadjective

stern and unfriendly in appearance and manner

living a harsh life with few pleasures : ascetic

simple sense 4a, unadorned

an austere room

auspiciousadjective

promising success : favorable

an auspicious beginning

successful sense 1, prosperous

has been an auspicious year

auspiciousadjective

promising success : favorable

an auspicious beginning

successful sense 1, prosperous

has been an auspicious year

auspiciousadjective

promising success : favorable

an auspicious beginning

successful sense 1, prosperous

has been an auspicious year

auspicenoun

predicting the future especially according to the flight of birds

omenespecially: a favorable sign

plural support and guidance of a sponsor

a concert given under the auspices of the school

auspicenoun

predicting the future especially according to the flight of birds

omenespecially: a favorable sign

plural support and guidance of a sponsor

a concert given under the auspices of the school

auspice 例句

1 It runs without corporate financing under the auspices of the nonprofit, artist-run organization Arts for Art.

2 The city spent $21.8 million on the previously unused building; now it has fronted an additional $20.4 million for exhibits and some building modifications needed to finally open it under Discovery's auspices.

3 Scientists have been fascinated by this work because this phenomenon was predicted a century ago under the auspice of Albert Einstein's theory of general relativity.

4 Angell’s under Bacquet’s auspice introduced a new tapas menu that runs concurrent with the dinner menu.

5 Eastern time, it opens its virtual doors for free through the auspices of Georgetown’s Laboratory for Global Performance and Politics for 90 minutes of scripted and spontaneous commentary with an online audience.

6 But with its reopening this Saturday under the auspices of the National Park Service after a relocation and five years of renovations costing $14.5 million, this house may have finally found a home.

7 They are under the auspices of federal agencies, but many cases are ignored, Weiden writes, including crimes against women.

8 “Free Solo,” which is already breaking box-office records, arrives in theaters under the auspices of National Geographic.

9 Under the auspices of Flux Factory, a Queens gallery, it will be open for reservations Thursday through Saturday all summer long, an experiment in urban vacationing and D.I.Y. ingenuity.

10 Each soloist — the American violinist Stephen Waarts, the French clarinetist Raphaël Sévère and the Korean cellist Sang-Eun Lee — had previously given a New York recital under Young Concert Artists’s auspices.

11 I first encountered Apple via "Cubed," a spectacularly compact, deadpan office comedy presented under the auspices of Above Average, the Internet arm of Lorne Michaels' Broadway Video.

12 Composers like Steve Reich, Pauline Oliveros and Terry Riley carried out many sonic investigations under the auspices of the San Francisco Tape Music Center, an electronic studio that gained prominence in the ’60s.

13 Officially, you are not allowed to visit Cuba as a tourist; rather, you must travel under the auspices of 12 official reasons.

14 He took her gentle words as an auspice of happiness.

他把她温柔的话当作是幸福的吉兆。

15 Is a particular topic the most foolish, picayune, first-world issue you have ever seen highlighted under the august auspices of The New York Times?

16 Organized by the conductor and composer Matthias Pintscher and imported from the Salzburg Festival in Austria, the program had its premiere there last summer under the auspices of the Salzburg Foundation.

17 It was part of a monthlong series of shows by the Red Bull Music Academy that market the energy drink under the auspices of injecting genuine vitality and intelligence into New York night life.

18 The funds were raised under the auspice of Tulane's $1.3 billion fundraising campaign.. . . . . . .

19 Fighting back, W.H.O. officials place the program in Peshawar under the auspices of the city’s ruling political party.

20 Indeed, the events of Olivia's experience offer powerful subjects for her verse, and she made fine work of them as she explored their meaning and significance via the auspices of language.

auspice 同义词

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