preordained in the PONS Dictionary

preordained Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

to be preordained to fail
he was preordained to succeed

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Every match, goal, controversies, transfer -- every action that has occurred in 90 minutes on the pitch or beyond it, is preordained.
www.thehardtackle.com
However, saving the astronauts was neither the most probable outcome of that particular crisis nor was it preordained in any way.
thehill.com
The outcome is preordained, if not the timing.
news.nationalpost.com
I look forward to gathering the evidence showing how certain individuals made sure the outcome was preordained.
espn.go.com
And even if it took him until age 53 to fully learn why he chose a path that seemed almost preordained.
www.dailybreeze.com
It was a meaningless mime, a ritual, a kabuki drama in which the outcome was utterly preordained.
www.telegraph.co.uk
Whether you're talking about history or about life, nothing is preordained.
www.huffingtonpost.com
She eventually enters the palace, knowing that her fate is preordained and unavoidable.
en.wikipedia.org
Lab employees began to work backwards, from a conclusion preordained by the prosecutors they served, and sought to justify that conclusion rather than using more scientific research paradigms.
en.wikipedia.org
When you meet the person you are meant to be with, there's this overwhelming feeling that this was preordained.
forward.com

Look up "preordained" in other languages


Choose your language Deutsch | English | Srpski