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Definition of Fatidical
1. a. Having power to foretell future events; prophetic; fatiloquent; as, the fatidical oak.
Definition of Fatidical
1. Adjective. Having power to foretell future events; prophetic; fatiloquent. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Fatidical
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Fatidical
Literary usage of Fatidical
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Japan, Real and Imaginary by Sydney Greenbie (1920)
"XXX HISTORICAL AND fatidical HAVE read book upon book of Japanese history, and,
though the subject is extremely interesting as a study in human behavior, ..."
2. Archaeologia Graeca, Or The Antiquities of Greece by John Potter, Robert Anderson, George Dunbar (1832)
"Sometimes, instead of tablets, they had pots or urns, into which the lots or
fatidical verses were thrown, and thence drawn ..."
3. The Theosophist by Theosophical Society (Madras, India) (1898)
"Then shone forth the fatidical splendor of a divine light, and the deity is
present, seated near to him. Le Pelletier tells us that there was a ..."
4. On the Functions of the Brain and of Each of Its Parts: With Observations on by Franz Josef Gall (1835)
"... and the same aversion towards new truths; the same tenacious adherence to old
errors, the same credulity and the same superstition. The fatidical ..."
5. Archæologia Græca: Or, The Antiquities of Greece by John Potter (1751)
"... upon which were written certain fatidical ... they had Pots or Urns, into
which the Lots or fatidical ..."
6. Grecian Antiquities: Or, An Account of the Public and Private Life of the by Thomas Harwood (1801)
"... upon which were written certain fatidical ... they fomc- times ufed pots or
urns, into which the lots or fatidical ..."