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fate

  • 1 fate

    [feit]
    1) ((sometimes with capital) the supposed power that controls events: Who knows what fate has in store (= waiting for us in the future)?) μοίρα
    2) (a destiny or doom, eg death: A terrible fate awaited her.) μοιραίο,κακό
    - fatalist
    - fatalistic
    - fated
    - fateful

    English-Greek dictionary > fate

  • 2 Fate

    subs.
    Destiny: P. and V. τὸ χρεών (Plat. but rare P.), μοῖρα, ἡ (Plat. but rare P.). P. ἡ εἱμαρμένη, V. ἡ πεπρωμένη, μόρος, ὁ, πότμος, ὁ, αἶσα, ἡ, τὸ μόρσιμον, τὸ χρῆν (Eur., I.T. 1486).
    The Fates: P. and V. Μοῖραι (Plat., Rep. 617C).
    One's lot: P. and V. δαίμων, ὁ, πθος, τό, πθημα, τό.
    Fortune: P. and V. τύχη, ἡ, συμφορά, ἡ.
    Death: P. and V. θνατος, ὁ, τελευτή, ἡ; see Death.
    Foreseeing the fate to which they are hurrying: P. προορώμενοι εἰς οἷα φέρονται (Thuc. 5, 111).
    ——————
    Μοῖρα, ἡ.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Fate

  • 3 fate

    1) ειμαρμένη
    2) μοίρα
    3) πεπρωμένο

    English-Greek new dictionary > fate

  • 4 Ordained by fate

    adj.:V. μοιρόκραντος; see Fatal.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Ordained by fate

  • 5 Appoint

    v. trans.
    P. and V. καθιστναι or mid., τάσσειν, προστάσσειν.
    Set up: P. and V. τιθέναι, ἱστναι, προτιθέναι or mid.
    Fix, lay down: P. and V. ὁρίζειν.
    Set over: P. and V. ἐφιστναι.
    Mark off: P. ἀποδεικνύναι.
    Appoint by lot: P. and V. κληροῦν.
    Be appointed: P. and V. προκεῖσθαι.
    Of laws, etc.: P. and V. κεῖσθαι.
    Appoint beforehand: V. προτάσσειν.
    It is appointed ( by fate): P. and V. εἵμαρται, V. πέπρωται.
    Appointed ( by fate): P. and V. εἱμαρμένος, V. πεπρωμένος (rare P.).
    Appointed, fixed: P. and V. προκείμενος, κριος, P. ῥητός.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Appoint

  • 6 Fatality

    subs.
    Necessity: P. and V. νάγκη, ἡ.
    Fate: see Fate.
    Disaster: P. and V. πθος, τό, πθημα, τό, συμφορά, ἡ.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Fatality

  • 7 as sure as

    (used in various phrases that mean `without fail' or `without doubt': As sure as fate / anything / eggs are eggs, he'll be late again.) χωρίς αμφιβολία

    English-Greek dictionary > as sure as

  • 8 come to a sticky end

    (to have an unpleasant fate or death.) έχω κακό τέλος

    English-Greek dictionary > come to a sticky end

  • 9 destined

    ['destind]
    1) ((having a future) organized or arranged beforehand (by a person or by fate): She was destined for success.) προορισμένος
    2) (bound or heading (for a place): destined for Singapore.) κατευθυνόμενος

    English-Greek dictionary > destined

  • 10 destiny

    ['destəni]
    plural - destinies; noun
    (the power which appears or is thought to control events; fate: We are all subject to the tricks played by destiny.) πεπρωμένο

    English-Greek dictionary > destiny

  • 11 doom

    [du:m] 1. noun
    (fate, especially something terrible and final which is about to happen (to one): The whole place had an atmosphere of doom; His doom was inevitable.) επικείμενη καταστροφή
    2. verb
    (to condemn; to make certain to come to harm, fail etc: His crippled leg doomed him to long periods of unemployment; The project was doomed to failure; He was doomed from the moment he first took drugs.) καταδικάζω

    English-Greek dictionary > doom

  • 12 face

    [feis] 1. noun
    1) (the front part of the head, from forehead to chin: a beautiful face.) πρόσωπο
    2) (a surface especially the front surface: a rock face.) επιφάνεια,πλευρά
    3) (in mining, the end of a tunnel etc where work is being done: a coal face.) μέτωπο εξόρυξης
    2. verb
    1) (to be opposite to: My house faces the park.) βλέπω σε
    2) (to turn, stand etc in the direction of: She faced him across the desk.) αντικρύζω
    3) (to meet or accept boldly: to face one's fate.) αντιμετωπίζω
    - - faced
    - facial
    - facing
    - facecloth
    - facelift
    - face-powder
    - face-saving
    - face value
    - at face value
    - face the music
    - face to face
    - face up to
    - in the face of
    - lose face
    - make/pull a face
    - on the face of it
    - put a good face on it
    - save one's face

    English-Greek dictionary > face

  • 13 fatalism

    noun (the belief that fate controls everything, and man cannot change it.) μοιρολατρεία

    English-Greek dictionary > fatalism

  • 14 fated

    adjective (controlled or intended by fate: He seemed fated to arrive late wherever he went.) γραφτός,καταδικασμένος

    English-Greek dictionary > fated

  • 15 in the balance

    (in an undecided or uncertain state: Her fate is (hanging) in the balance.) αμφίρροπος

    English-Greek dictionary > in the balance

  • 16 lot

    [lot]
    1) (a person's fortune or fate: It seemed to be her lot to be always unlucky.) γραφτό, ριζικό
    2) (a separate part: She gave one lot of clothes to a jumble sale and threw another lot away.) ποσότητα, φουρνιά
    3) (one article or several, sold as a single item at an auction: Are you going to bid for lot 28?) παρτίδα (σε δημοπρασία)
    - a lot
    - draw/cast lots

    English-Greek dictionary > lot

  • 17 resignation

    [reziɡ'neiʃən]
    1) (the act of resigning.) παραίτηση
    2) (a letter etc stating that one is resigning: You will receive my resignation tomorrow.) (έγγραφη) παραίτηση
    3) ((the state of having or showing) patient, calm acceptance (of a situation, fact etc): He accepted his fate with resignation.) καρτερία

    English-Greek dictionary > resignation

  • 18 resigned

    adjective ((often with to) having or showing patient, calm acceptance (of a fact, situation etc): He is resigned to his fate.) υποταγμένος

    English-Greek dictionary > resigned

  • 19 seal

    I 1. [si:l] noun
    1) (a piece of wax or other material bearing a design, attached to a document to show that it is genuine and legal.) σφραγίδα
    2) (a piece of wax etc used to seal a parcel etc.) βουλοκέρι
    3) ((something that makes) a complete closure or covering: Paint and varnish act as protective seals for woodwork.) (υλικό για) στεγανοποίηση, σφράγισμα
    2. verb
    1) (to mark with a seal: The document was signed and sealed.) σφραγίζω
    2) ((negative unseal) to close completely: He licked and sealed the envelope; All the air is removed from a can of food before it is sealed.) σφραγίζω
    3) (to settle or decide: This mistake sealed his fate.) σφραγίζω
    - seal of approval
    - seal off
    - set one's seal to
    II [si:l] noun
    (any of several types of sea animal, some furry, living partly on land.) φώκια

    English-Greek dictionary > seal

  • 20 stroke

    [strəuk] I noun
    1) (an act of hitting, or the blow given: He felled the tree with one stroke of the axe; the stroke of a whip.) χτύπημα
    2) (a sudden occurrence of something: a stroke of lightning; an unfortunate stroke of fate; What a stroke of luck to find that money!) χτύπημα,πλήγμα/εύνοια(της τύχης)
    3) (the sound made by a clock striking the hour: She arrived on the stroke of (= punctually at) ten.) χτύπος ρολογιού
    4) (a movement or mark made in one direction by a pen, pencil, paintbrush etc: short, even pencil strokes.) κονδυλιά,μολυβιά,πινελιά
    5) (a single pull of an oar in rowing, or a hit with the bat in playing cricket.) κίνηση,χτύπημα
    6) (a movement of the arms and legs in swimming, or a particular method of swimming: He swam with slow, strong strokes; Can you do breaststroke/backstroke?) κολυμβητική κίνηση
    7) (an effort or action: I haven't done a stroke (of work) all day.) στάλα(δουλειά)
    8) (a sudden attack of illness which damages the brain, causing paralysis, loss of feeling in the body etc.) εγκεφαλική συμφόρηση, εγκεφαλικό
    II 1. verb
    (to rub (eg a furry animal) gently and repeatedly in one direction, especially as a sign of affection: He stroked the cat / her hair; The dog loves being stroked.) χαϊδεύω
    2. noun
    (an act of stroking: He gave the dog a stroke.) χάδι

    English-Greek dictionary > stroke

См. также в других словарях:

  • fate — [feıt] n [Date: 1300 1400; : French; Origin: Latin fatum what has been spoken (by the gods) , from fari to speak ] 1.) [C usually singular] the things that will happen to someone, especially unpleasant events ▪ I wouldn t wish such a fate on my… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • Fate — • Lat. fatum, from fari, to tell or predict Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Fate     Fate     † …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Fate — is defined by Destiny, controlled by free will, explained by Karma. Fate may refer to:* Destiny, an inevitable course of events * Fatalism, a philosophical doctrineComputing* Fate (1996 game), an unpublished computer game * Fate (video game), a… …   Wikipedia

  • 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… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • FATE — oder FATE kann sich auf die folgenden Dinge beziehen: Fate (Band), eine dänische Hardrock Band Fate (Texas), eine Stadt in Texas Fate (Computerspiel), ein Computerspiel aus dem Jahr 2005 Fate: Gates of Dawn, ein Computer Rollenspiel aus dem Jahr… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • FATE — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda FATE es una supercomputadora creado por Belthasar en un futuro distante. FATE tiene conocimiento de sí misma y puede operar sola. Luego de que Chronopolis fue lanzado atrás en el tiempo, FATE aseguró el control del… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Fate — bezeichnet: Fate (Band), eine dänische Hardrock Band Fate (Texas), eine Stadt in Texas Fate (Computerspiel), ein Computerspiel aus dem Jahr 2005 Fate: Gates of Dawn, ein Computer Rollenspiel aus dem Jahr 1991 Fate/stay night, ein japanisches… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • fate — [ feıt ] noun ** 1. ) count the things that happen to someone, especially unpleasant things: fate of: a meeting which would decide the fate of thousands of employees suffer a fate: The refugees have suffered an appalling fate. 2. ) uncount a… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • fate — fate, destiny, lot, portion, doom are comparable when they denote the state, condition, or end which is decreed for one by a higher power. Fate presupposes such a determining agent or agency as one of the ancient goddesses called Fates, the… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • fate — fate; fate·ful; fate·ful·ly; fate·ful·ness; sul·fate; …   English syllables

  • fate — [fāt] n. [ME < L fatum, prophetic declaration, oracle < neut. pp. of fari, to speak: see FAME] 1. the power or agency supposed to determine the outcome of events before they occur; destiny 2. a) something inevitable, supposedly determined… …   English World dictionary

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