[
US
/feɪtəˈɫɪstɪk/
]
[ UK /fˌeɪtəlˈɪstɪk/ ]
[ UK /fˌeɪtəlˈɪstɪk/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
of or relating to fatalism
fatalistic thinking
a fatalist person
How To Use fatalistic In A Sentence
- How many taunts, threats or downright abusive remarks have been reluctantly swallowed with a fatalistic shrug?
- In a bunch finish he will, at exactly the right moment, spurt away to leave his rivals looking exhausted and feeling fatalistic. Times, Sunday Times
- In like vein, psychiatrists have vacillated between emphasizing curability and chronicity, between extreme optimism and a more fatalistic pessimism, and between a commitment to deal with the severely mentally ill and a search to find other kinds of patients. The Mad Among Us
- Nevertheless, it's hard to ignore his fatalistic tone when he talks about the music business.
- Others would take a more fatalistic view and say that work is simply necessary. Christianity Today
- Nashe's attitude to his fate is fatalistic, he accepts that his freedom is taken from him and the building of the wall becomes a kind of atonement.
- They get the argument out of a tight corner, and make for a less fatalistic scenario.
- At this stage, students look beyond fatalistic or cultural reasons for inequality to focus on structural, systemic explanations.
- This virtual web server sturdiness diploidy your rutherfordium off with hot dextrose, leader, orthodontic succory, fatalistic christ, and noiselessly. Rational Review
- Time is the fault of fatalistic testimony people.