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1. Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
Friday, Friday the thirteenth, Heaven, Paradise, Z, a better place, accidentality, act of God, actuarial calculation, adventitiousness, afterlife, afterworld, allocate, allot, allotment, allowance, apodosis, appoint, appointed lot, appropriate to, assign, assign to, astral influences, astrology, bane, big end, bigger half, bit, bite, book of fate, break, budget, casualness, catastrophe, ceasing, certainty, cessation, chance, chunk, circumstance, coda, collapse, commission, conclusion, consequence, constellation, consummation, contingent, crack of doom, culmination, cup, curtain, curtains, cut, deal, death, death knell, deathblow, decease, denouement, destinate, destination, destine, destiny, destruction, detail, determine, devote, dies funestis, disaster, disposition, dividend, dole, doom, downfall, earmark, effect, end, end point, ending, envoi, epilogue, equal share, eschatology, eternal home, expiration, fatality, fatefulness, final solution, final twitch, final words, finale, finality, finis, finish, flukiness, force majeure, foredoom, fortuitousness, fortuity, fortune, future, future state, gamble, goal, good fortune, good luck, half, halver, hap, happenstance, happy chance, heedless hap, helping, home, how they fall, ides of March, indefeasibility, indeterminacy, indeterminateness, ineluctability, inescapableness, inevasibleness, inevitability, inevitable accident, inevitableness, inexorability, inflexibility, interest, irrevocability, issue, izzard, karma, kismet, last, last breath, last gasp, last things, last trumpet, last words, latter end, law of averages, life, life after death, life to come, lot, luck, make assignments, mark, mark off, mark out for, measure, meed, mess, modicum, moiety, moira, necessity, nemesis, next world, omega, opportunity, ordain, otherworld, outcome, part, payoff, percentage, period, peroration, piece, planets, portion, portion off, postexistence, predetermination, preordain, principle of indeterminacy, probability, problematicness, proportion, providence, quantum, quietus, quota, rake-off, random sample, ration, relentlessness, reserve, resolution, resting place, restrict, restrict to, result, risk, ruin, run of luck, schedule, segment, serendipity, set, set apart, set aside, set off, share, slice, small share, stake, stars, statistical probability, stock, stoppage, stopping place, sureness, swan song, tag, term, terminal, termination, terminus, the beyond, the breaks, the good hereafter, the grave, the great beyond, the great hereafter, the hereafter, the unknown, theory of probability, unavoidable casualty, unavoidableness, uncertainty, uncertainty principle, uncontrollability, undeflectability, undoing, unlucky day, unpreventability, unyieldingness, upshot, vis major, weird, what bodes, what is fated, whatever comes, wheel of fortune, will of Heaven, windup, world to come
Dictionary Results for fate:
1. WordNet® 3.0 (2006)
fate
    n 1: an event (or a course of events) that will inevitably
         happen in the future [syn: destiny, fate]
    2: the ultimate agency regarded as predetermining the course of
       events (often personified as a woman); "we are helpless in
       the face of destiny" [syn: destiny, fate]
    3: 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" [syn: fortune, destiny, fate, luck,
       lot, circumstances, portion]
    v 1: decree or designate beforehand; "She was destined to become
         a great pianist" [syn: destine, fate, doom,
         designate]

2. The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Fate \Fate\ (f[=a]t), n. [L. fatum a prophetic declaration,
   oracle, what is ordained by the gods, destiny, fate, fr. fari
   to speak: cf. OF. fat. See Fame, Fable, Ban, and cf.
   1st Fay, Fairy.]
   1. 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.
      [1913 Webster]

            Necessity and chance
            Approach not me; and what I will is fate. --Milton.
      [1913 Webster]

            Beyond and above the Olympian gods lay the silent,
            brooding, everlasting fate of which victim and
            tyrant were alike the instruments.    --Froude.
      [1913 Webster]

   2. Appointed lot; allotted life; arranged or predetermined
      event; destiny; especially, the final lot; doom; ruin;
      death.
      [1913 Webster]

            The great, th'important day, big with the fate
            Of Cato and of Rome.                  --Addison.
      [1913 Webster]

            Our wills and fates do so contrary run
            That our devices still are overthrown. --Shak.
      [1913 Webster]

            The whizzing arrow sings,
            And bears thy fate, Antinous, on its wings. --Pope.
      [1913 Webster]

   3. The element of chance in the affairs of life; the
      unforeseen and unestimated conitions considered as a force
      shaping events; fortune; esp., opposing circumstances
      against which it is useless to struggle; as, fate was, or
      the fates were, against him.
      [1913 Webster]

            A brave man struggling in the storms of fate.
                                                  --Pope.
      [1913 Webster]

            Sometimes an hour of Fate's serenest weather strikes
            through our changeful sky its coming beams. --B.
                                                  Taylor.
      [1913 Webster]

   4. pl. [L. Fata, pl. of fatum.] (Myth.) The three goddesses,
      Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos, sometimes called the
      Destinies, or Parc[ae]who were supposed to determine
      the course of human life. They are represented, one as
      holding the distaff, a second as spinning, and the third
      as cutting off the thread.
      [1913 Webster]

   Note: Among all nations it has been common to speak of fate
         or destiny as a power superior to gods and men --
         swaying all things irresistibly. This may be called the
         fate of poets and mythologists. Philosophical fate is
         the sum of the laws of the universe, the product of
         eternal intelligence and the blind properties of
         matter. Theological fate represents Deity as above the
         laws of nature, and ordaining all things according to
         his will -- the expression of that will being the law.
         --Krauth-Fleming.

   Syn: Destiny; lot; doom; fortune; chance.
        [1913 Webster]

3. U.S. Gazetteer Places (2000)
Fate, TX -- U.S. city in Texas
   Population (2000):    497
   Housing Units (2000): 184
   Land area (2000):     4.730197 sq. miles (12.251153 sq. km)
   Water area (2000):    0.016616 sq. miles (0.043035 sq. km)
   Total area (2000):    4.746813 sq. miles (12.294188 sq. km)
   FIPS code:            25572
   Located within:       Texas (TX), FIPS 48
   Location:             32.933781 N, 96.384482 W
   ZIP Codes (1990):    
   Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
   Headwords:
    Fate, TX
    Fate


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