FATED | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary Scholars in comparative literature are fated to read poems in languages they don't speak - sometimes, indeed, in dead languages that no one speaks
FATED definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary If you say that a person is fated to do something, or that something is fated, you mean that it seems to have been decided by fate before it happens, and nothing can be done to avoid or change it
fated, adj. meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English Dictionary There are seven meanings listed in OED's entry for the adjective fated, two of which are labelled obsolete See ‘Meaning use’ for definitions, usage, and quotation evidence OED's earliest evidence for fated is from 1608, in the writing of William Shakespeare, playwright and poet
Fated - Definition, Meaning Synonyms | Vocabulary. com Definitions of fated adjective (usually followed by `to') determined by tragic fate “ fated to be the scene of Kennedy's assassination” synonyms: doomed certain, sure certain to occur; destined or inevitable
Home | Fated: The Musical FATED is King Arthur’s story like you’ve never heard it before: a rock opera with barely any dialogue, just raw emotion This isn’t the legend you know, it’s the legend behind the legend
fated - Wiktionary, the free dictionary Adjective fated (not comparable) Foreordained, predetermined, established in advance by fate Synonyms: fateful, predestined; see also Thesaurus: fated