unpropitious

IPA: ʌnprʌpˈɪʃʌs

adjective

  • Not propitious; unfavourable, untimely.
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Examples of "unpropitious" in Sentences

  • Stoll chose an unpropitious time to start a magazine for the California wine industry.
  • In the wake of the near collapse of the euro in 2011, many economists considered 2012 an unpropitious year to launch Africa's single currency.
  • Reports from Richmond, where the Virginia assembly met on October 20, 1788, were “very unpropitious to federal measures,” Washington reported in November.
  • Not the rich, more than the poor; not the learned, more than the ignorant; not the haughty heirs of distinguished names, more than the humble sons of obscurity and unpropitious fortune.
  • In any case, the tainted election and the murderous suppression of protest that followed made an unpropitious setting for the passage from a greeting on the air to a toe in the water of negotiations.
  • This would seem like unpropitious territory for a candidate who favours eliminating the minimum wage, privatising social security on which the elderly rely, and paring government down to its bare essentials.
  • I've known him since shortly after he was elected to the European Parliament in 2004, mainly (but not exclusively) on the Cyprus issue where he has played a subtly constructive role in unpropitious circumstances.
  • In Democracy in America, Tocqueville seems nothing more than an impressionable amanuensis — and perhaps a too-willing mouthpiece for the moneyed classes of New York and Boston, who, Damrosch shows in Tocqueville's Discovery of America, celebrated Tocqueville's unpropitious landfall with predictable provincial pomp.

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synonyms for unpropitious
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