[
US
/ˈhɔɹəˌskoʊp/
]
[ UK /hˈɒɹəskˌəʊp/ ]
[ UK /hˈɒɹəskˌəʊp/ ]
NOUN
- a prediction of someone's future based on the relative positions of the planets
- a diagram of the positions of the planets and signs of the zodiac at a particular time and place
How To Use horoscope In A Sentence
- To say she was superstitious was an understatement - she would book every single Friday 13 th off work, and any day that looked inauspicious on her horoscope.
- Underneath the ‘ordinary ’dial is another which has a rather diabolical look, but which is simply a piece of horology that shows those star signs that tell your horoscope.
- The selections this week include reflections on the Meath bus crash, Conor Lenihan as a kebab chef, a Star Wars horoscope, cyberstalking, and deranged art.
- This Kristo's horoscope site had some interesting stuff on it that I want to come back and check out, about dreams, astrology, alchemy, intuition and some other junk.
- Likewise, each planet holds sway over certain houses in a horoscope.
- But, as with horoscopes, lots of newspapers shrug it off as an ‘oh, it's just for entertainment’ thing.
- He joined DC Thomson, where he wrote horoscopes for the women's magazine Secrets before being promoted to the unlikely role of beauty editor.
- It was set up a decade ago for left-wingers branded trouble-makers by conventional agencies which are more used to delving into hobbies, hair colours and horoscopes.
- Your readers may be independent, modern, logical, gorgeous, intelligent, strong-minded, post-feminist, business women, but they all still read horoscopes don't they?
- Some Arabic horoscopes were based on astronomical tables calculated in India.