propitious

adjective

pro·​pi·​tious prə-ˈpi-shəs How to pronounce propitious (audio)
Synonyms of propitiousnext
1
: favorably disposed : benevolent
2
: being a good omen : auspicious
propitious sign
3
: tending to favor : advantageous
propitiously adverb
propitiousness noun

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Propitious, which comes to us through Middle English from the Latin word propitius, is a synonym of favorable and auspicious. All three essentially mean "pointing toward a happy outcome," with some differences of emphasis. Favorable implies that someone or something involved in a situation is approving or helpful ("a favorable recommendation"), or that circumstances are advantageous ("favorable weather conditions"). Auspicious usually applies to a sign or omen that promises success before or at the start of an event ("an auspicious beginning"). Propitious may also apply to beginnings, but it often suggests a continuing promising condition ("propitious conditions for an alliance").

Choose the Right Synonym for propitious

favorable, auspicious, propitious mean pointing toward a happy outcome.

favorable implies that the persons involved are approving or helpful or that the circumstances are advantageous.

favorable weather conditions

auspicious applies to something taken as a sign or omen promising success before or at the start of an event.

an auspicious beginning

propitious may also apply to beginnings but often implies a continuing favorable condition.

a propitious time for starting a business

Examples of propitious in a Sentence

Now is a propitious time to start a business. the success of the first big movie in May was a propitious start for the summer season of blockbusters
Recent Examples on the Web
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The charging boom proved particularly propitious in March, as the Iran War roiled oil markets, gas prices surged and Americans started searching for EVs en masse. Bloomberg, Mercury News, 8 Apr. 2026 Interloom’s timing may be propitious. Jeremy Kahn, Fortune, 23 Mar. 2026 The timing is propitious: Italy has beaten the U.S., Mexico, Brazil, Great Britain, and Puerto Rico, ending their run in the semifinals against Venezuela, who went on to become world champions. Nicola Bambini, Vanity Fair, 19 Mar. 2026 The circumstances in which many creative efforts arise are rarely propitious. Joshua Rothman, New Yorker, 13 Feb. 2026 See All Example Sentences for propitious

Word History

Etymology

Middle English propycyous, from Anglo-French propicius, from Latin propitius, probably from pro- for + petere to seek — more at pro-, feather

First Known Use

15th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Time Traveler
The first known use of propitious was in the 15th century

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Cite this Entry

“Propitious.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/propitious. Accessed 28 Apr. 2026.

Kids Definition

propitious

adjective
pro·​pi·​tious prə-ˈpish-əs How to pronounce propitious (audio)
1
: giving favorable signs of the success of something to come : promising
a propitious first interview
2
: likely to produce good results
a propitious undertaking

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