Predestinate — Pre*des ti*nate, a. [L. praedestinatus, p. p. of praedestinare to predestine; prae before + destinare to determine. See {Destine}.] Predestinated; foreordained; fated. A predestinate scratched face. Shak. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
predestinate — index prearrange, predetermine Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
predestinate — [prē des′tə nit; ] for v. [, prē des′tənāt΄] adj. [ME predestynate < L praedestinatus, pp. of praedestinare, to PREDESTINE] predestinated or foreordained vt. predestinated, predestinating 1. Theol. to foreordain by divine decree or intent 2.… … English World dictionary
predestinate — I. adjective Etymology: Middle English, from Latin praedestinatus, past participle of praedestinare Date: 14th century destined, fated, or determined beforehand II. transitive verb ( nated; nating) Etymology: Middle English, from Latin… … New Collegiate Dictionary
predestinate — predestinately, adv. v. /pri des teuh nayt /; adj. /pri des teuh nit, nayt /, v., predestinated, predestinating, adj. v.t. 1. Theol. to foreordain by divine decree or purpose. 2. Obs. to foreordain; predetermine. adj. 3. predestined; foreordained … Universalium
predestinate — (Roget s Thesaurus II) verb To determine the future of in advance: destine, fate, foreordain, predestine, predetermine, preordain. See CERTAIN … English dictionary for students
predestinate — pre·des·ti·nate || ‚prÉªË destɪneɪt v. decree, preordain (by a higher power); decide in advance, predetermine, predestine … English contemporary dictionary
predestinate — verb pri: dɛstɪneɪt predestine. adjective pri: dɛstɪnət predestined. Origin ME: from eccles. L. praedestinat , praedestinare make firm beforehand , from prae in advance + destinare establish … English new terms dictionary
predestinate — v. a. Predetermine, foreordain, preordain, predestine, foredoom, appoint before hand … New dictionary of synonyms
predestinate — v 1.Theology, (all by divine decree or purpose) fate, ordain, doom, Rare. destinate; predetermine, predestine, preordain, foreordain, fore ordinate, foredoom, predecide, preelect, Inf. have in store for. adj 2. ordained, doomed, destined, fated,… … A Note on the Style of the synonym finder