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predestine
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Predestine

Predestine \Pre*des"tine\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Predestined; p. pr. & vb. n. Predestining.] [Cf. F. pr['e]destiner. See Predestinate.] To decree beforehand; to foreordain; to predestinate.
--Young.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
predestine

late 14c., "to foreordain," from Old French prédestiner (12c.) "predestine, ordain" (of God) and directly from Latin praedestinare "determine beforehand" (see predestination). Related: Predestined; predestining; predestinate.

Wiktionary
predestine

vb. 1 (context transitive English) To determine the future or the fate of something in advance; to preordain. 2 (context theology English) To foreordain by divine will.

WordNet
predestine
  1. v. decree or determine beforehand

  2. foreordain by divine will or decree [syn: predestinate, foreordain]

  3. foreordain or determine beforehand [syn: foreordain, preordain]

Usage examples of "predestine".

He branded Simon Peter for his perfidy, and drove him out forever from the apostleship he had disgraced, denouncing him as a son of hell and a predestined citizen of the outer darkness?

In relation to these predestined victims sadistic behavior was right and proper, so much so that it could be publicly avowed and rationalized in terms of current scientific theories.

He was aware that his manuscript was not a model of caligraphy, but, on being remonstrated with, he passionately declared he could not do any better, promising, however, sarcastically that, as a predestined diplomat, he would keep an amanuensis in future.

Before that, like every other waterway in North America, it brought the Indians, Sac and Fox and Miami and Huron and Potawatomi and the mysterious Copper People, who paused not long enough to leave a disfiguring mark on the land they loved, then continued on their predestined way to oblivion.

They were closer than the outer ring, which kept a uniform girth around the prairie, but somehow they looked very peculiar and foreboding, and I got one of those sobering feelings which I like to call predestined deja vu.

I made up my mind to set off in the opposite direction, north, and to advance at a double march until I should reach the woody border, which looked to present shelter not only from the southern apparitions, but also from the shielded underworld of the grasses, in which also dwelt the mysterious sense of fear and predestined deja vu.

Perhaps it was only a case of predestined deja vu, or maybe it was something less tangible.

Dublin was the capital of Ireland so it seemed predestined that General Sherman would land with his troops in Galway, to strike east and take that city.

Every act of theirs, which appears to them an act of their own will, is in an historical sense involuntary and is related to the whole course of history and predestined from eternity.

Home runs were happening for him, mystical jump shots curved along predestined tracks.

He could see his future laid out before him, clean and predestined, like fifty years of happy machine language.

Directed by an oracle, she swam beyond sight of land to meet her revolting paramour, and received at sea the seed of a predestined family.

In the double city of Mopsuestia, which is divided by the River Sarus, two hundred thousand Moslems were predestined to death or slavery, ^115 a surprising degree of population, which must at least include the inhabitants of the dependent districts.

For he probably bore away the feeling from those early days that he was predestined to become a leader and spokesman, and he did all that he could to outwit the obtrusiveness of fate.

On this afternoon, except for a solitary purple dogwood blooming by the cemetery fence, it looked as though the spring had never touched the land here, as though this place had been predestined as moonscape, a geographical monument to what was worst in us.