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predestine

[ UK /pɹɪdˈɛstɪn/ ]
[ US /ˌpɹiˈdɛstən/ ]
VERB
  1. decree or determine beforehand
  2. foreordain or determine beforehand
  3. foreordain by divine will or decree

How To Use predestine In A Sentence

  • They went astray from the predestined path thus destructing the overall wholeness of the planet.
  • For your information ma'am, the recognized scientific community has confirmed many times that there is no genetic marker that predestines an individual to be homosexual. Gay soldier: Obama's 'don't ask' pledge a reprinted IOU
  • While a Chevy Volt stays tethered to GMs uncertain predestine as well as a as if tall cost tag, Nissan is ecstatic about a future of a yet-to-be-named electric car. Archive 2009-12-01
  • Few people would attain their predestined ending could they see it in advance.
  • Many other Quranic ideas reinforce the point that God does not predestine in the popular sense. Printing: Divine Will and Human Freedom -- Part I. Divine Predestination: How Far Real?
  • The late Nobel laureate Ilya Prigogine has demonstrated that creativity in nature leads, through infinite bifurcations or decision points, to an unforetold plurality of possibilities, not a predestined fate for man or molecule.
  • Perhaps that is what we call yen fen (predestined romance); they started dating each other soon afterward, and tied the knot after six months. My Sinchew -
  • For those whom He foreknew, He also predestined to become conformed to the image of His Son, so that He would be the firstborn among many brethren; and these whom He predestined, He also called; and these whom He called, He also justified; and these whom He justified, He also glorified. Recovering From Religious Abuse
  • But you are not predestined to repeat your father's mistakes.
  • Ironically, however, he at the same time also subscribed to the view that God predestines our fate even before we are born. Printing: Divine Will and Human Freedom -- Part I. Divine Predestination: How Far Real?
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