An outcome, condition or event that is predetermined by fate [the power that predetermines events].
1But a combination of Covid and kismet led me to try again.
2My kismet is indeed bad; I can see no road of escape.
3Mark has a bravado that thrives on the kismet of travel.
4In this context, the arrival of Marks Barfield in 2005 looks like kismet.
5It was their fate, a deep-sea kismet as unavoidable as death.
6If you cannot, then we must just say kismet, I suppose.
7Be thy kismet as thy courage, then-butI am hers, not thy man!
8You can call that a bond or kismet or fate.
9Well, well, it is kismet, and it must be faced.
10So is the World Cup, as kismet would have it.
11It is your kismet, as it was Gaddy's, and his kismet who can avoid?
12Well, well, it is kismet, and must be faced.
13There was something kismet-like about the whole affair.
14She'd liked the scenario better when she'd thought it was pure coincidence, a touch of kismet.
15Who am I to foretell a man's kismet?
16But, fate or kismet, no thank you.