0 not able to be avoided because planned by a power that controls events:
[ + that ] It seemed fated that we would get married.
[ + to infinitive ] She says she was fated to become a writer.
So we are fated to act it out.
Like life, baseball games take as long as is fated.
For present purposes the important question is whether all attempts at synthesis are fated to be so simplified.
These in turn may be fated to differentiate into neurons and glia in a spatially and temporally regulated manner.
All these scientists maintain to some extent that if outcomes are fated, they cannot be changed.
Yet it is important not to see that loss as necessarily fated from the beginning.
Scholars in comparative literature are fated to read poems in languages they don't speak - sometimes, indeed, in dead languages that no one speaks.
Archigram was fated for an agitational role within the profession.