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  1. Dictionary
    fatalistic
    /ˌfeɪtlˈɪstɪk/

    adjective

    • 1. relating to or characteristic of the belief that all events are predetermined and therefore inevitable: "many have an almost fatalistic attitude towards their own health"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Fatalistic means believing that people cannot change the way events will happen and that events, especially bad ones, cannot be avoided. Learn more about the word, its synonyms, antonyms, and usage in sentences from the Cambridge English Corpus.

  3. Fatalistic means believing that people cannot change the way events will happen and that events, especially bad ones, cannot be avoided. Learn more about the word, its synonyms, antonyms, and usage in sentences from various sources.

  4. Fatalism is the belief that events are fixed in advance and that human beings are powerless to change them. Learn more about the word history, examples, and related terms of fatalism from Merriam-Webster dictionary.

  5. Use the adjective fatalistic to describe someone who believes outcomes are determined in advance and can't be changed. If you think there’s no way you can pass your math exam and studying won’t change anything, then you’re fatalistic. When you pronounce fatalistic, you can hear the word fate.

  6. Fatalistic means feeling that you cannot change or control something unpleasant or unwanted. Learn how to use this word in sentences with examples from The Guardian and other sources.

  7. Fatalism is the attitude of mind that accepts whatever happens as having been bound or decreed to happen. Learn about the origins, implications, and contrasts of fatalism with determinism and free will from Britannica's philosophy and religion articles.

  8. Fatalistic means showing a belief in fate and feeling that you cannot control events or stop them from happening. Learn how to use this word in sentences and find synonyms and related topics.