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"intertwined fates" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
You can use it to describe two people, events, or things that are linked together inextricably, usually in a negative way. For example, "Jane and John had intertwined fates, their lives inextricably linked by tragedy."
Exact(12)
Balcomb and other researchers, including Orca Network's, Howard Garrett, highlighted an October event, "Intertwined Fates: The Orca-Salmon Connection".
Salih manages to put his finger on the root of our intertwined fates.
The pair's intertwined fates will surely one day make a movie far more compelling than Fifa's £17m vanity project United Passions.
They dwarf the classic century-old City Hall, where Mr. Street will be anxiously governing, watching the intertwined fates of conventioneers, protesters and his beloved Philadelphia.
In Damascus, an activist saw the intertwined fates of Mr. Assad and Colonel Qaddafi, who in a defiant message broadcast Wednesday called the people who overthrew him rats and traitors.
More than 12 hours long, the film concerns the intertwined fates of a group of theater actors and a pair of eccentric flâneurs as they venture into a labyrinth of coincidence, conspiracy, meta-narrative and role-playing.
Similar(48)
PARK An independent picture from Los Angeles, featuring that form's favorite structure: the criss-crossing lives and intertwining fates of Angelenos lured outside their automobiles.
Companions in Conflict is a surprising investigation into how deeply intertwined the fates of the region's human and animal populations really are.
"PARK"An independent picture from Los Angeles, featuring the independent's favorite structure: crisscrossing lives and intertwining fates, this time of Angelenos lured to step outside their automobiles.
For some reason, me and Miesha are intertwined in fate like Ali and Frazier or something like that".
Indeed, the filmʼs immense popularity is most likely enhanced by its universally appealing storyline: seemingly random and disconnected events are, in some unfathomable sense, intertwined by fate.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com