Fate
Sorunu sor hemen cevaplansın.
fate teriminin İngilizce Türkçe sözlükte anlamı
- kader
Örnek Cümle:
Ölüm herkesin kaderidir.
-Death is everyone's fate.
Örnek Cümle:
Kader benim lehine döndü.
-Fate has turned in my favour.
- ecel {i}
- akibet {i}
- devran
- çarkıfelek
- mukadderat
- alın yazısı
- ölüm
Örnek Cümle:
Belki ölüme meydan okumamalısın.
-Maybe you shouldn't tempt fate.
Örnek Cümle:
Test pilotları sürekli ölüme meydan okuyor.
-Test pilots are constantly tempting fate.
- son
Örnek Cümle:
Sonunda iki aile kaderini kabul etti.
-In the end the two families accepted their fate.
Örnek Cümle:
Son tanık mahkûmun kaderini belirledi.
-The last witness sealed the prisoner's fate.
- akıbet
Örnek Cümle:
Kocasıyla aynı akıbeti paylaştı.
-She shared her husband's fate.
- gelecek
Örnek Cümle:
Hiçbir amacı yokmuş gibi görünen ama var olmaktan başka bir kaderi olmadığı da açık olan bir sonsuzluktaki sonsuz gelecekte neler olacak?
-What will happen in the eternal future that seems to have no purpose, but clearly just manifested by fate?
- kısmet
- yazgı
- felâket {i}
- encam
- helâk
- tâlih {i}
- the Fates kader tanrıçaları
- felek {i}
- kadere bağlı
- mahvolmaya mahkûm
- fated kadere dayanan
- kader tanrıçası {i}
- alınyazısı
- fate of a collection
- tahsilin akıbeti
- fate of goods
- malların akıbeti
- fate and fatalism
- kader ve kadercilik
- irony of fate
- kaderin cilvesi
- fateful
- {s} önemli
- fateful
- {s} kadere bağlı
- cruel fate
- kambur felek
- curse one's fate
- talihine küsmek
- curse one's fate
- kaderine küsmek
- endure one's fate
- (deyim) kaderine boyun eğmek
- fateful
- çok önemli
- fateful
- {s} felâket getiren
- fateful
- hayati önemi olan
- line of fate
- Avuç içindeki kader çizgisi
- meet the same fate
- (deyim) aynı kaderi paylaşmak
- pity one's fate
- derdine yanmak
- submission one's fate
- kazaya rıza
- suffer the same fate
- (deyim) aynı kaderi paylaşmak
- evil fate
- karayazı
- fated
- kadere bağlı
- fated
- kadere dayanan
- fateful
- kaçınılmaz
- fateful
- alında yazılı olan
- leave one to one's fate
- kaderiyle baş başa bırakmak
- seal sb's fate
- birinin kaderini çizmek
- cruel fate
- zalim kader
- endure one's fate
- Kaderine katlanmak, kaderine boyun eğmek, kaderine razı olmak
- fatefully
- kaçınılmaz bir şekilde
- goddess of fate: future
- kader tanrıçası: gelecek
- have so.'s fate sealed
- olduk. 'kaderini belirledi s
- quirk of fate
- kaderin cilvesi
- seal sb's fate
- mahvını kesinleştirmek
- shades of fate
- kaderin gölgesi
- tempt fate
- eceline susamak
you're tempting fate every time you drive that old wreck of a car.
- to fate
- kaderine
- to seal the fate
- Kaderi mühürlemek için
- twist of fate
- Kaderin cilvesi
- abandon somebody to one's fate
- kaderine terk etmek
- be left to one's fate
- kendi kaderine terk edilmek
- big with fate
- işi kadere kalmış
- big with fate
- allah'a kalmış
- bow to fate
- kadere boyun eğmek
- fated
- kaderde olan
- fated
- kaçınılmaz
- fated
- alına yazılmış
- fated
- mahvolmaya mahkum
- fated
- yazılmış/mahkum
- fateful
- meşum
- fateful
- mukadderatı tayin eden
- fateful
- meşum bir şekilde
- fateful
- {s} kaderi belirleyen
- fateful
- uğursuz
- fateful
- tarihi önem taşıyan
- fateful
- öldürücü
- fateful
- can alıcı
- fateful
- fatefully kaçınılmaz bir surette
- fateful
- mukadder
- fateful
- {s} vahim
- fateful
- mukadder olarak
- if fate so decrees
- kısmetse
- leave something to its fate
- kaderine terketmek
- leave something to its fate
- kaderine bırakmak
- manifestation of fate
- kaderin cilvesi
- resigned to fate
- kadere boyun eğmiş
- seal one's fate
- kaderini belirlemek
- seal one's fate
- yazgısını önceden tayin etmek
- sharing a common fate
- kader birliği
İlgili Terimler
fate teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- Any one of the Fates
- A personification of fate (the cause that predetermines events)
- The three goddesses (The Fates) of classic European mythology who are said to control the fate of human beings
- To foreordain or predetermine, to make inevitable
Örnek Cümle:
The oracle's prediction fated Oedipus to kill his father, not all his striving could change what would occur.
- The cause, force, principle, or divine will that predetermines events
- Destiny (perhaps connotes death, ruin, misfortune, etc.)
Örnek Cümle:
Accept your fate.
- The effect, consequence, outcome, or inevitable events predetermined by this cause
- destiny, fortune, person's lot in life; death; destruction {i}
- = something destined or suitable, is not the Latin fatum, but the French fait = share, one's own, that which suits one; as "voila mon fait," that is the man for me "Pour moi, ma sieur, a dit la cadette, j'aime le solide, je veux un homme riche, et le gros don Blanco sera mon fait " - Le Sage: Diable Boiteux Fates (1 syl ) The cruel fates The Greeks and Romans supposed there were three Parcæ or Fates, who arbitrarily controlled the birth, events, and death of every man They are called cruel because they pay no regard to the wishes and requirements of anyone The three Fates were Clotho (who held the distaff), Lachesis (who spun the thread of life), and Atropos (who cut it off when life was ended)
- the ultimate agency that predetermines the course of events (often personified as a woman); "we are helpless in the face of Destiny"
- (Gk- keres, fates of death): Fagles found that Homer used the term in two ways, both in an impersonal sense as "death, doom, a man's individual fate," and also in a personified sense as the "spirit of death;" in the latter sense Homer used the term in the plural for those "shadowy but potent figures who ultimately control the destiny of mortals;" they were supposed to derive from the decisions and declarations of the gods, thus making their outcome inevitable and determined; however, in the Iliad, one sees brave men struggle against their fate(s), and discover at least some measure of freedom to be able to influence or contribute to their destinies (e g Aeneas is said to struggle "against the will of fate" XX 383; see "gods" below)
- Fate is a power that some people believe controls and decides everything that happens, in a way that cannot be prevented or changed. You can also refer to the fates. I see no use quarrelling with fate. the fickleness of fate It was just one of those times when you wonder whether the fates conspire against you
- The three goddesses, Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos, sometimes called the Destinies, or Parcæwho were supposed to determine the course of human life
- A person's or thing's fate is what happens to them. The Russian Parliament will hold a special session later this month to decide his fate He seems for a moment to be again holding the fate of the country in his hands The Casino, where she had often danced, had suffered a similar fate. = destiny
- The destined result of life after a sequence of fated events
- If something seals a person's or thing's fate, it makes it certain that they will fail or that something unpleasant will happen to them. The call for a boycott could be enough to seal the fate of next week's general election to tempt fate: see tempt
- Fruits of karma, wishes, or a combination of the two
- Appointed lot; allotted life; arranged or predetermined event; destiny; especially, the final lot; doom; ruin; death
- One's share or portion in life (or in a situation) The specificity of that which we are 'given' The constraints over which we have very little or no choice and within which we must live The recognition that a sense of meaning that can be found in the particular and collective limitations that all of us must face Gods C G Jung, modifying Neitzche, noted that the gods have become diseases The planets, representative of gods (archetypal principals) are primordial images within the human soul Within the imagination, they take on human-like form and inform the symbols that lie at the root of our dialogue with destiny An individual horoscope corresponds to a unique and original moment within the divine conversation (logos), i e , it expresses a singular relationship amidst the eternal principles that lie at the foundations of the human psyche
- The element of chance in the affairs of life; the unforeseen and unestimated conitions considered as a force shaping events; fortune; esp
- decree or designate beforehand; "She was destined to become a great pianist"
- an event (or a course of events) that will inevitably happen in the future
- A fixed decree by which the order of things is prescribed; the immutable law of the universe; inevitable necessity; the force by which all existence is determined and conditioned
- (noun) an outcome; destiny; the thought that a future event is unavoidable because no matter what you do you can't change it
- your overall circumstances or condition in life (including everything that happens to you); "whatever my fortune may be"; "deserved a better fate"; "has a happy lot"; "the luck of the Irish"; "a victim of circumstances"; "success that was her portion"
- They are represented, one as holding the distaff, a second as spinning, and the third as cutting off the thread
- opposing circumstances against which it is useless to struggle; as, fate was, or the fates were, against him
- fate map
- a diagram of an embryo of some organism showing the structures that will develop from each part
- fate decreed otherwise
- all did not go as planned, events turned out differently than expected
- fate has decided
- destiny has determined, chance has it that, fortune has decided
- Urn of Fate
- An Italian Christmas tradition in which boxes are selected from an urn, only some of them containing presents
- fated
- Foreordained, predetermined, established in advance by fate
- fated
- Simple past tense and past participle of fate
- fateful
- Determined in advance by fate, fated
- fateful
- Momentous, significant, setting or sealing ones fate
It started with that fateful trip, history was never the same afterwards.
- fucked by the fickle finger of fate
- victimised by bad luck
- twist of fate
- An unfortunate turn of events
- line of fate
- A crease on the palm; palmists say it indicates how successful you will be; line of destiny, Saturn line
- fated
- {a} decreed by fate, destined, doomed, set
- advise fate
- A request by a collecting bank wishing to know, as soon as possible, whether a cheque will be paid on its receipt by the paying bank
- Fates
- {i} (Greek Mythology) goddesses of destiny who controlled human lives, Moirai
- Fates
- in Greek and Roman mythology, the three goddesses who decided what should happen in each person's life. In Greek and Roman mythology, the three goddesses who determined human destiny. The Fates were usually depicted as old women: Clotho, the Spinner; Lachesis, the Allotter; and Atropos, the Inflexible. Clotho spun the thread of human life, Lachesis dispensed it, and Atropos cut the thread. They determined the length of each person's life as well as its share of suffering. Their Roman names were Nona, Decuma, and Morta
- Fates
- Atropos, Clotho, and Lachesis; supernatural beings who controlled the destiny of men and of the gods
- as sure as fate
- very certain, very sure
- blind fate
- destiny which one does not know of
- common fate
- shared destiny, shared fate
- common fate
- a Gestalt principle of organization holding that aspects of perceptual field that move or function in a similar manner will be perceived as a unit
- cruel fate
- destiny which includes suffering or failure
- determined his fate
- chose his lot in life, made his own destiny
- fated
- {s} destined; predestined; doomed
- fated
- 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. He was fated not to score. stories of desperation, fated love, treachery and murder. see also ill-fated = doomed. certain to happen or to do something because a mysterious force is controlling events = destined be fated to do sth
- fated
- Exempted by fate
- fated
- Invested with the power of determining destiny
- fated
- Decreed by fate; destined; doomed; as, he was fated to rule a factious people
- fated
- (usually followed by `to') determined by tragic fate; "doomed to unhappiness"; "fated to be the scene of Kennedy's assassination"
- fateful
- If an action or a time when something happened is described as fateful, it is considered to have an important, and often very bad, effect on future events. It was a fateful decision, one which was to break the Government. = momentous. having an important, especially bad, effect on future events fateful day/night/year etc
- fateful
- Having the power of serving or accomplishing fate
- fateful
- (of events) having extremely unfortunate or dire consequences; bringing ruin; "the stock market crashed on Black Friday"; "a calamitous defeat"; "the battle was a disastrous end to a disastrous campaign"; "such doctrines, if true, would be absolutely fatal to my theory"- Charles Darwin; "it is fatal to enter any war without the will to win it"- Douglas MacArthur; "a fateful error"
- fateful
- {s} destined; decisive; lethal; disastrous; inevitable; prophetic
- fateful
- when
- fateful
- controlled or decreed by fate; predetermined; "a fatal series of events"
- fateful
- it declared war on North Korea"- Saturday Rev; "the fatal day of the election finally arrived" of ominous significance
- fateful
- having momentous consequences; of decisive importance; "that fateful meeting of the U N when it declared war on North Korea"- Saturday Rev; "the fatal day of the election finally arrived"
- fateful
- it declared war on North Korea"- Saturday Rev; "the fatal day of the election finally arrived"
- fateful
- Significant of fate; ominous
- fateful
- having momentous consequences; of decisive importance; "that fateful meeting of the U
- fateful
- of ominous significance
- fatefully
- through destiny; decisively, critically; inevitably
- fatefully
- in a prophetically fateful manner; "the nurse whispered fatefully to call the priest"
- fatefully
- In a fateful manner
- fatefully
- in a prophetically fateful manner; "the nurse whispered fatefully to call the priest
- fatefulness
- {i} quality of being controlled by fate; ominousness; quality of being prophetic; great importance
- fatefulness
- The quality of being fateful
- fates
- The three Moirae, sisters who supervise the creation, duration, and termination of all mortals' lives They are Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos
- fates
- plural of fate
- fates
- Includes selected data on pesticide producers
- fates
- a group of three goddesses of destiny
- fates
- FIFRA and TSCA Enforcement System Source: US EPA
- his fate
- his destiny, his lot, his fortune, his future
- his fate is sealed
- he is doomed, his future is decided
- his fate is trembling in the balance
- his destiny will be determined, his fate depends upon (the outcome of an event, etc.)
- his fate was sealed
- the judgment upon him was decreed, his destiny was decided upon
- intertwined fate
- future that is linked to another
- irony of fate
- incongruity between what is expected in life and the actual outcome
- line of fate
- a crease on the palm; palmists say it indicates how successful you will be
- master of one's fate
- one in control of his destiny
- quirk of fate
- turn of fate, shift of destiny
- rail at the fate of
- cry over the fate of, mourn the destiny of
- reconcile oneself to one's fate
- be at peace with one's destiny, accept one's fate
- resigned himself to his fate
- made peace with his destiny, quietly accepted his situation
- twist of fate
- changes of destiny, events which alter the present reality in an unexpected manner
- vicissitudes of fate
- ups and downs of fate, sudden changes that occur to a person or society
- weep on sad fate
- cry over one's destiny
- yield to fate
- submit to destiny
İlgili Terimler
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