destinies in English

noun
1
the events that will necessarily happen to a particular person or thing in the future.
she was unable to control her own destiny

Use "destinies" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "destinies" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "destinies", or refer to the context using the word "destinies" in the English Dictionary.

1. Their destinies are intertwined.

2. (Matthew 7:13, 14) Two roads, two destinies.

3. They are also a pointer to our connected destinies.

4. Vile despots would themselves become The masters of our destinies!

5. People want to control/determine/take charge of their own destinies.

6. The choices you make tonight will ripple through time, altering fates and destinies.

7. Out of which maladroit delay sprang anxieties, disappointments, shocks, catastrophes, and passing-strange destinies.

8. It well Behooves those in high places to make their actions and opinions conform to their great destinies

9. You put in a coin, a wand twirls, and a brief selection of perfunctory destinies is on offer.

10. "Possibilities, Attainabilities, improvements, or destinies, grander than these expressions imply, no language can express, and no being receive

11. 1995, Philip Pullman, Northern Lights: There were two kinds of Beardom opposed here, two futures, two destinies

12. According to Spykman, "Who controls the Rimland rules Eurasia, who rules Eurasia controls the destinies of the world."

13. Analogia: The Entangled Destinies of Nature, Human Beings and Machines, by George Dyson, Allen Lane, RRP£25, 304 pages

14. This is the Africa where people want to take charge of their own futures and their own destinies.

15. 26 But true to their cultural destinies, both generations plan to ride out the historic changes in their homeland.

16. Analogia, by George Dyson (Farrar, Straus & Giroux).This idiosyncratic history of “the entangled destinies of nature, human beings, and machines” charts the arrival of a new epoch

17. I have always believed that the destinies of people of India and Pakistan are very closely linked, interlinked that we have wasted lot of time in the past in acrimonious debates.

18. Moirai - In ancient Greek religion and mythology, the Moirai (; Ancient Greek: Μοῖραι, "lots, destinies, Apportioners"), often known in English as the Fates (Latin: Fata), Moirae or Mœræ (obsolete), w

19. While the tides of time Eat out the rocks of empire, and the stars Of human destiny Adown the void Go glittering to their doom, she changeless sweeps Through all her times and destinies.

20. Amitate: "In the Amitate a sister is superior to her brother in that the paternal aunt can dictate the matrimonial destinies of her brother's children." ES:72, GPM:71

21. And they have given no right to any of the charlatans swaggering on the national political landscape as their leaders to play with their lives and destinies, as are these Chicaners doing over these times

22. What this Accoutred frowsty barn is worth, It pleases me to stand in silence here; A serious house on serious earth it is, In whose blent air all our compulsions meet, Are recognised, and robed as destinies

23. The strong sense of political affinity and solidarity between India and Africa dates back several decades to when the peoples of India and Africa were engaged in an unremitting struggle to gain independence from colonial rule and to become arbiters of their own destinies.

24. The strong sense of political affinity and solidarity between India and Africa dates back to the several decades of the twentieth century when the peoples of India and Africa were engaged in an unremitting struggle to gain independence from colonial rule and to become arbiters of their own destinies.

25. There was a Benignancy, a sweetness of demeanor, which attracted them to him, and while his name may not be sounded in the trump of fame, yet the subtile power of his gentleness and goodness has permeated many lives, will shape many destinies, and will have a force in the history of the world greater than that

26. In ancient Greek religion and mythology, the Moirai (/ ˈ m ɔɪ r aɪ,-r iː /, also spelled Moirae or Mœræ; Ancient Greek: Μοῖραι, "lots, destinies, Apportioners"), often known in English as the Fates (Latin: Fata), were the incarnations of destiny; their Roman equivalent was the Parcae (euphemistically the "sparing ones"), and there are other equivalents in cultures that descend