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fate
[feyt]
noun
something that unavoidably befalls a person; fortune; lot.
It is always his fate to be left behind.
the universal principle or ultimate agency by which the order of things is presumably prescribed; the decreed cause of events; time.
Fate decreed that they would never meet again.
that which is inevitably predetermined; destiny.
Death is our ineluctable fate.
a prophetic declaration of what must be.
The oracle pronounced their fate.
death, destruction, or ruin.
Classical Mythology., the Fates, the three goddesses of destiny, known to the Greeks as the Moerae and to the Romans as the Parcae.
verb (used with object)
to predetermine, as by the decree of fate; destine (used in the passive).
a person who was fated to be the savior of the country.
Synonyms: preordain, foreordain
fate
/ feɪt /
noun
the ultimate agency that predetermines the course of events
the inevitable fortune that befalls a person or thing; destiny
the end or final result
a calamitous or unfavourable outcome or result; death, destruction, or downfall
verb
(tr; usually passive) to predetermine; doom
he was fated to lose the game
Word History and Origins
Origin of fate1
Word History and Origins
Origin of fate1
Idioms and Phrases
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Dennis is indeed twinless — not by a twist of fate but because he came into this world a singleton and is lying.
Plenty of folk at Westminster reckon today is the day her fate will be determined.
And Sadr's disappearance also arguably changed the fate of the world's most politically, religiously and ethnically volatile region - the Middle East.
Wales knew that the opening game against Scotland would likely decide their World Cup fate.
“It is elegiac, but it isn’t weepy,” John said of the film when he first scored it, never imagining the sudden tragic fate of his young friend.
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