0 present participle of augur
1 to be a sign of especially good or bad things in the future:
The company's sales figures for the first six months augur well for the rest of the year.
Do you think that this recent ministerial announcement augurs (= is a sign of) a shift in government policy?
A new norm of 'transparency through fidelity' to the work guided both conducting and performing, auguring hierarchical relations between composer and interpreters, and between conductor and players.
A brief epilogue features an unspecified person auguring a row of holes across the prairie.