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"fatalistically" Definitions
  1. in a way that shows a belief in fate and a feeling that you cannot control events or stop them from happening

24 Sentences With "fatalistically"

How to use fatalistically in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "fatalistically" and check conjugation/comparative form for "fatalistically". Mastering all the usages of "fatalistically" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"If the government lets us do business, we will do business," says one fatalistically.
In the end, however, Raphaël doesn't go through with it: "Blood changes nothing," he observes fatalistically.
It has gotten so bad that some are praying, fatalistically, for a decisive outcome of any kind.
I laughed so hard that I swallowed my gum, started to choke, and fatalistically wondered if 2016 would literally kill me.
"I'll probably take a hit here," he said, almost fatalistically, in the opening minutes of Friday's debate at Saint Anselm College.
In the Middle Ages, for example, when the Black Plague killed off half the populations of towns, the others sort of went on fatalistically.
This approach acknowledges that, while we can't eliminate gun crime, we can reduce it, and that doing something is better than fatalistically doing nothing.
The Celtics will sometimes feed their All-Star starter just above the elbow, then move fatalistically, deep down knowing how the play is meant to unfold.
St. Placidus was rolling fatalistically amid the blue waves of his pond, while one of his comrades, endowed with special powers by St. Benedict, came walking across the water to save him.
After fatalistically choking out middleweights before turning into a mediocre kickboxer, Maia has come full circle at 170 pounds: he's the mild-mannered, sound-bite-free embodiment of BJJ orthodoxy, where grappling is the solution to every problem in the street or in the cage.
Letters To the Editor: Re "We Won't Cure Cancer," by Jarle Breivik (Op-Ed, May 27): This fatalistically negative statement is in contrast to the fact that we do cure cancer and that the numbers are increasing, albeit at a slower rate than we would like.
Rushing into a life-or-death operation and worrying only about the health of the mother, the surgical team hadn't thought they might need anything other than their regular kit, a substandard ensemble they fatalistically call "kamikaze": short-sleeved cotton scrubs, rubber apron, latex gloves, paper surgical mask, goggles, bonnet.
It will seek adaptation proactively, > not fatalistically. It will establish social and economic security as > preconditions for ecological action. It will be large and transformative, > but not millenarian.
The film ends with the peasants dancing to the cry of "Ee ja nai ka" ("Why not!?", "Whatever!", or "Nevermind!"), which fatalistically refers to the tumultuous 1866-67 period of Japanese history immediately preceding the imperial restoration and the end of the Edo period.
Thus Chamberlain had to make the best of a hopeless situation, writing fatalistically that "I consider the Unionist cause is hopeless at the next election, and we shall certainly lose the majority of the Liberal Unionists once and for all." Chamberlain already regarded tariff reform as an issue that could revitalise support for Unionism.
His brother explains that he had been praying to leave New Mexico and see more of the world – while he is not happy about being drafted, he fatalistically accepts that it is the only way he is likely to be able to fulfill his dream. The brothers resolve to allow God to work freely for the rest of their lives, and not bother God with petty requests.
There they have remained ever since. Among the INA personnel, there was widespread disbelief, shock, and trauma. Most affected were the young Tamil Indians from Malaya and Singapore, both men and women, who comprised the bulk of the civilians who had enlisted in the INA. The professional soldiers in the INA, most of whom were Punjabis, faced an uncertain future, with many fatalistically expecting reprisals from the British.
They pointed out that groups differ in their attitudes, values and beliefs about health and illness. This view could affect adherence, particularly with preventive treatments and medication for asymptomatic conditions. Additionally, some cultures fatalistically attribute their good or poor health to their god(s), and attach less importance to self-care than others. also Measures of adherence may need to be modified for different ethnic or cultural groups.
This inevitably results in overpopulation ... and civilization-ending wars. The Masters, whom the Mediators obey, have also concealed the existence of one Motie subspecies from the humans: Warriors more deadly than any human, even Sauron supersoldiers. The museums exist to help restore civilization after a collapse. The "Cycles" of civilization, war, and collapse have gone on for hundreds of thousands of years, leaving the Moties fatalistically resigned to their destiny.
According to the memoirs of Hendrik Adriaan Jacobs, the Viljoen Commando knew that an attack was coming. The members of the Commando, however, were "feverish" from the effects of malaria and fatalistically waited for the arrival of the Bushveldt Carbineers. Jacobs later recalled how he saw Hunt's party through a window and began shooting. Possibly mistaking Jacobs's first shot for the signal, the BVC and the Lobedu also began shooting and general pandemonium ensued.
According to the memoirs of Hendrik Adriaan Jacobs, the Viljoen Commando knew that an attack was coming. The Commando's members, however, were "feverish" from the effects of malaria and fatalistically waited for the arrival of the Bushveldt Carbineers. Jacobs later recalled how he saw Hunt's party through a window and began shooting. Possibly mistaking Jacobs' first shot for the signal, the BVC and the Lobedu also began shooting and general pandemonium ensued.
Bernardim Ribeiro (1482?-1536?) made use of bucolic poetry, singing about love fatalistically (he is more renowned, however, for his prose work Menina e Moça). In the next generation, António Ferreira (1528–1569), making a wide use of classical forms, expresses the same antipathy related to the detriment of society, but with a pedagogical purpose. This was also the time of António Gonçalves de Bandarra (1500–1566), a cobbler who learned to read despite his low social status, and who read the Bible.
Siewert described her health complaints as "clear proof of her unbearable life among Germans". Overall, Germany was a "country of torment" for her, and she even viewed the so-called economic miracle with scepticism, especially after an anonymous note saying "Long live Germany!" was once stuck to her door by neighbours. Siewert regarded many of her fellow Germans as "unreformable", and in her correspondence with Kurt Hiller she fatalistically complained: "It makes no sense as a reasonable person to try to steer this insane ship with a hostile crew, surrounded by the shadows of the costly dead" and "One should let those who neither deserve nor desire anything better simply go under." She cynically asked why this "Volk" (people) developed a reputation as being composed of poets and thinkers.
In response to Chamberlain's warning about Nonconformist dissent, and suggestion that voluntary schools receive funds from central rather than local government, Robert Morant replied that the Boer War had drained the Exchequer. Chamberlain sought to stem the feared exodus of Nonconformist voters by securing a major concession – local authorities would be given the discretion over the issue of rate aid to voluntary schools, yet even this was renounced before the guillotining of the Bill and its passage through Parliament in December 1902. Thus, Chamberlain had to make the best of a hopeless situation, writing fatalistically that 'I consider the Unionist cause is hopeless at the next election, and we shall certainly lose the majority of the Liberal Unionists once and for all.' Chamberlain already regarded tariff reform as an issue that could revitalise support for Unionism.

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