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Showing results for oracular.
Definitions

oracular

[aw-rak-yuh-ler, oh-rak-] / ɔˈræk yə lər, oʊˈræk- /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Kusama took on an oracular aspect in the dark as she spoke.

From New York Times

Jeffers uses that oracular narrator to carry us swiftly through the foundational sins of North America.

From Washington Post

Icke has reworked Ibsen’s oracular 1882 play, about a whistleblower in a Scandinavian town dependent for economic survival on a spa whose waters he knows to be contaminated.

From Washington Post

Clocking in at nearly five and a half hours, it lets you experience oracular powers long after you have finished viewing Biggers’s monumental sculpture.

From New York Times

Brown's new role as political expert is frankly no worse than CNN's insistence on regularly featuring New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman as oracular genius and valiant defender of democracy.

From Salon