Fatal in a sentence as an adjective

They are the key to avoiding fatal frustration.

On top of that come fatal breakages in the messaging system the body uses to control the flow of energy.

My biggest gripe with LinkedIn is that recently, I made the fatal mistake of letting it look at my Gmail contacts.

Too many software quirks make it annoying to use, and the lack of physical hardware buttons may be a fatal flaw.

These are fatal to a political system that relies on an informed citizenry.

I realize that someone walking away unhurt from what would have been a fatal collision might feel that it was a miracle, but it might just have been good engineering.

[2]Though the kitchen is the most common location for a fire in dwellings, kitchen fires are among the least likely to be fatal because cooking usually is attended and occurs during waking hours.

The main reason, then, is that if your Objective-C programs leaked file descriptors and network connections as often as they leaked memory, the world would be in a sorry state:Memory leaks are bugs that should be fixed, but....Remember the "I don't mean to be a ___, but..." discussion?Memory leaks are bugs that should be fixed, but they are generally not immediately fatal.

"When officers went to investigate, there was a physical altercation between police and 26-year-old Gerardo Diego Ayala that ended with a fatal officer-involved shooting.

This is not necessarily a fatal problem considering that receiving programming mentoring is the point of the mentoring program, but we don't quite have the resources to make up for it all -- the idea is more to focus on helping with KDE specifics than general programming.

""For man's everyday needs, it would have been quite enough to have the ordinary human consciousness, that is, half or a quarter of the amount which falls to the lot of a cultivated man of our unhappy nineteenth century, especially one who has the fatal ill-luck to inhabit Petersburg, the most theoretical and intentional town on the whole terrestrial globe.

Fatal definitions

adjective

bringing death

adjective

having momentous consequences; of decisive importance; "that fateful meeting of the U.N. when...it declared war on North Korea"- Saturday Rev; "the fatal day of the election finally arrived"

See also: fateful

adjective

(of events) having extremely unfortunate or dire consequences; bringing ruin; "the stock market crashed on Black Friday"; "a calamitous defeat"; "the battle was a disastrous end to a disastrous campaign"; "such doctrines, if true, would be absolutely fatal to my theory"- Charles Darwin; "it is fatal to enter any war without the will to win it"- Douglas MacArthur; "a fateful error"

See also: black calamitous disastrous fateful

adjective

controlled or decreed by fate; predetermined; "a fatal series of events"

See also: fateful