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Definition of Fatefully
1. Adverb. In a prophetically fateful manner. "The nurse whispered fatefully to call the priest"
Definition of Fatefully
1. Adverb. In a fateful manner ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Fatefully
1. [adv]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Fatefully
Literary usage of Fatefully
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Bookman (1903)
"I believe in the comedy even of tears, and try to find it wherever I can even in
the life of the most fatefully sad." To make Poe live before a knowing and ..."
2. The Souls of Black Folk: Essays and Sketches by William Edward Burghardt Du Bois (1907)
"The centre of this spiritual turmoil has ever been the millions of black freedmen
and their sous, whose destiny is so fatefully bound up with that of the ..."
3. Publishers Weekly by Publishers' Board of Trade (U.S.), Book Trade Association of Philadelphia, American Book Trade Union, Am. Book Trade Association, R.R. Bowker Company (1873)
"... lawless affair of honor involving the throne of a Malayan prince blundered
the English yacht, fatefully stranded in the midst of the conspiracy. ..."
4. The Cambridge History of English Literature by Adolphus William Ward, Alfred Rayney Waller (1914)
"... and English strain, born () in a family which united the two creeds that divide
Ireland more profoundly and fatefully than any distinction of race. ..."
5. Publications by Mississippi Historical Society (1918)
"The excitement over a fatefully famous case was intensified about this time by
a like tragedy. In executing an arbitrary arrest the military marshal of the ..."
6. Poems by Edward Sandford Martin (1914)
"... Finger not far from the trigger; Eager to swim in the tide's swiftest eddy,
fatefully steered on his way there, Him in the White House finding already, ..."
7. The Contemporary Review (1870)
"... struggling to escape, yet every moment drawn fatefully further and further on.
To outline the idea of the book would simply be to spoil its interest. ..."
8. The Contemporary Review (1885)
"But, as Lamennais was destined later fatefully to discover, if authority was to
rule at all, it must rule everywhere, in both Church and State ; if freedom ..."