fate
noun /feɪt/
  /feɪt/
Idioms - [countable] the things, especially bad things, that will happen or have happened to somebody/something
- The fate of the three men is unknown.
 - She sat outside, waiting to find out her fate.
 - The court will decide our fate/fates.
 - Each of the managers suffered the same fate.
 - The government had abandoned the refugees to their fate.
 - From that moment our fate was sealed (= our future was decided).
 
Extra Examples- He faces a grim fate if he is sent back to his own country.
 - He had no desire to share the fate of his executed comrades.
 - He had signed his confession and sealed his own fate.
 - He will learn his fate in court tomorrow.
 - His brother met an altogether different fate.
 - His fate rests in the hands of the judges.
 - Instead of just bemoaning your fate, why not do something to change it?
 - Jackson deserves a better fate than this.
 - Our fate is tied to yours.
 - She broke her ankle before the big game, then suffered the same fate a month later.
 - She faces an uncertain fate.
 - She has taken steps to control her own fate.
 - She managed to escape the fate of the other rebels.
 - The condemned men were resigned to their fate.
 - The convicts awaited their fate in prison.
 - The fate of the African wild dog hangs in the balance.
 - The jury held the fate of the accused in their hands.
 - The ultimate fate of the captured troops is unknown.
 - They decided to kill themselves rather than suffer a worse fate at the hands of their enemy.
 - They were warned of the dreadful fate that awaited them if ever they returned to their homes.
 - They're worried about their political fate.
 - This team's fate depends on how it performs today.
 - Under-representation is the likely fate of small parties.
 - What an unfortunate fate the gods had condemned her to.
 - What had he done to deserve such a terrible fate?
 - Will it change the fate of the company?
 - Worst of all was the fate that befell the captured rebel general.
 - the almost inevitable fate awaiting gorillas and tigers
 - the rights of a woman to choose the fate of her body
 - From the moment the hijackers took over the plane, their fate was sealed.
 - Fortunately, Robert was spared this cruel fate.
 - He had no idea what fate was in store for him.
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- awful
 - grim
 - horrible
 - …
 
- face
 - meet
 - suffer
 - …
 
- await somebody/something
 - be in store for somebody/something
 - lie in store for somebody/something
 - …
 
- leave your fate in somebody’s hands
 - place your fate in somebody’s hands
 - put your fate in somebody’s hands
 - …
 
 - [uncountable] the power that is believed to control everything that happens and that cannot be stopped or changed
- Fate was kind to me that day.
 - By a strange twist of fate, Andy and I were on the same plane.
 
Synonyms luckluck- chance
 - coincidence
 - accident
 - fate
 - destiny
 
- luck the force that causes good or bad things to happen to people:
- This ring has always brought me good luck.
 
 - chance the way that some things happen without any cause that you can see or understand:
- The results could simply be due to chance.
 
 - coincidence the fact of two things happening at the same time by chance, in a surprising way:
- They met through a series of strange coincidences.
 
 - accident something that happens unexpectedly and is not planned in advance:
- Their early arrival was just an accident.
 
 - fate the power that is believed to control everything that happens and that cannot be stopped or changed:
- Fate decreed that she would never reach America.
 
 - destiny the power that is believed to control events:
- I believe there’s some force guiding us—call it God, destiny or fate.
 
 
- by …luck/chance/coincidence/accident
 - It’s no coincidence/accident that…
 - pure/sheer luck/chance/coincidence/accident
 - to believe in luck/coincidences/fate/destiny
 
Extra ExamplesTopics Religion and festivalsc1- Anne accepted the cruel hand that fate had dealt her.
 - Fate decreed that she would never reach America.
 - Fate took a hand in (= influenced ) the outcome of the championship.
 - Fate was not smiling upon her today.
 - For some reason fate conspired against them and everything they did was problematic.
 - He believed that the universe was controlled by the whims of a cruel fate.
 - He secretly hoped that fate would intervene and save him having to meet her.
 - He was content standing aside, letting fate take its course.
 - I have a great deal of trust and I leave everything to fate.
 - It seemed a cruel twist of fate that the composer should have died so young.
 - Little did she know what fate had in store for her.
 - Only weeks later fate struck again, leaving her unable to compete.
 - Such coincidences are almost enough to make one believe in fate.
 - The new job had come at just the right time for him. Was it the hand of fate?
 - the prophet who predicts fate and can see the future
 - He suddenly started to rail against fate and all the things that had happened to him.
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- cruel
 - kind
 
- believe in
 - tempt
 - leave something to
 - …
 
- decide something
 - decree something
 - intervene
 - …
 
- an accident of fate
 - a turn of fate
 - a twist of fate
 - …
 
 
Word Originlate Middle English: from Italian fato or (later) from its source, Latin fatum ‘that which has been spoken’, from fari ‘speak’.
Idioms 
a fate worse than death 
- (often humorous) a terrible thing that could happen
- At the last minute the hero saves her from a fate worse than death.
 
Extra Examples- Getting married seemed a fate worse than death.
 - Obeying her parents' wishes for her life seemed a fate worse than death.
 
 
Wordfinder
 - amulet
 - charm
 - coincidence
 - fate
 - fortune
 - jinx
 - luck
 - mascot
 - superstition
 - talisman
 
tempt fate/providence 
- to do something too confidently in a way that might mean that your good luck will come to an end
- She felt it would be tempting fate to try the difficult climb a second time.
 - It would be tempting fate to say that we will definitely win the game.