13 example sentences using destine.
Destine used in a sentence
Destine in a sentence as a verb
Perhaps all sentient life is destine to the same fate, perhaps it is a law of nature.
Without the release of Photoshop and the other pieces of the tool chain, it was destine to fail.
"The mere existence of such tool is destine to be misused, regardless who made it. This is what real power looks like.
Copying or improving other product will destine to fail.
When millions of apps are competing for the 20~30 spots on the mobile phone screen, demand will define the scale of supply, which will destine to shrink.
While I would agree that Chrome, in some flavor, should be a part of Android, I wouldn't assume that Chrome is destine to be a part of Android.
They had now way to know that your startup wasn't destine to fail, but now that your idea has been successfully executed by someone else you feel vindicated.
I'd love to find something that lasts, but instead I feel destine to cycle over things that initially I love, and eventually despise for what I've turned them into.
In agreeing to peer with Level 3, I am sure Comcast has an agreement that they will not send any traffic to Comcast's network that is not actually destined for a Comcast customer.
Assuming that bugs aren't life & death in your product like car software to deploy airbags, or huge consequences/delays like a land rover destine for Mars missing its mark and flying off into space.
> but do you call living in a cage with your beak cut off "prospering"?Better than die at ten days old by any of the dozen predators living in a rainforest, that is the destine of 90% of the wild chicken
> Transfer of value in a physical Universe is always a givenIn what sense?> What destine creates within is motionIn what sense?> negative e-motionWhat is e-motion?
Yet, while doing just that and limiting his ruling to the particular facts before him, Judge Alsup has provided a definitive and logically compelling approach to how such issues are to be decided where they concern APIs and copyright and such reasoning is, in my view, destined to be widely applied throughout the court system going forward.