auspex

NOUN
  1. (ancient Rome) a religious official who interpreted omens to guide public policy
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How To Use auspex In A Sentence

  • Is Teucer called auspex, as taking the auspices, like an augur, or as giving the auspices, like a god? The Odes and Carmen Saeculare of Horace
  • -- (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Auspex Pharmaceuticals, a clinical stage company developing next-generation medicines with improved safety and performance through the targeted deuteration of clinically validated drugs, today announced the appointment of Michael Grey as President and Chief Executive Officer and R. Gary Gilmore as Chief Financial Officer. BioSpace.com Featured News and Stories
  • Auspex Pharmaceuticals, a developer of next-generation medicines with improved safety and performance through the targeted deuteration of clinically validated drugs, today announced positive results from its Phase 1 clinical trial evaluating SD-254, a Selective Serotinin-Norepinephrine Reuptake Inhibitor (SNRI). Medlogs - Recent stories
  • coniugis et castris et solio generi50 optatum celebrare diem! me iungeret auspex Epistle to Serena
  • Auspex itself uses the Sparc chip for its own version of the product.
  • The English noun "auspice," which originally referred to this practice of observing birds to discover omens, also comes from Latin "auspex. Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day
  • There are objections to both interpretations; a Roman imperator was not called auspex, though he was attended by an auspex, and was said to have the auspicia; auspex is frequently used of one who, as we should say, inaugurates an undertaking, but only if he is a god or a deified mortal. The Odes and Carmen Saeculare of Horace
  • The English noun "auspice," which originally referred to this practice of observing birds to discover omens, also comes from Latin "auspex. Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day
  • Auspex has the earliest and broadest position on the application of deuteration technology to validated medicines and has built an attractive pipeline of promising drug candidates," said Mike Grey. BioSpace.com Featured News and Stories
  • [14] Latin _auspicium_, from _auspex_, a bird seer. Early European History
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