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predestinate
[pri-des-tuh-neyt, pri-des-tuh-nit, -neyt]
verb (used with object)
Theology., to foreordain by divine decree or purpose.
Obsolete., to foreordain; predetermine.
adjective
predestined; foreordained.
predestinate
verb
(tr) another word for predestine
adjective
predestined or foreordained
theol subject to predestination; decided by God from all eternity
Other Word Forms
- predestinately adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of predestinate1
Example Sentences
Now this criminal of ours is predestinate to crime also; he, too, have child-brain, and it is of the child to do what he have done.
About a century and half later, even the wise Defoe wrote in his London plague novel that Turks and Mahometans “professed predestinating Notions, and of every Man’s End being predetermined.”
She thanked and complimented him warmly, but without being very much astonished at his success, for she began to think he was predestinated.
It is unreasonable to suppose that because God has predestinated all events, we need not take any step in the matter of our salvation.
We are “predestinated to be conformed to the image of God’s Son.”
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