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The phrase 'undergo the same fate' is correct and can be used in written English.
This phrase is used to describe when two or more people or things experience the same bad or undesirable outcome. For example, "The soldiers who fought in the battle were all destined to undergo the same fate."
Exact(6)
The labor unions will undergo the same fate as the political parties" in France under the Fifth Republic.
Impossible worlds may undergo the same fate, should they prove as useful as they appear to be in the treatment of impossibilities of various kinds.
A clone who knows that her genetic parent developed a severe single gene disease at the age of forty will realise it is very likely that she will undergo the same fate.
But should Al Akhbar one day undergo the same fate -- and I have no qualms in venturing that this is exactly what will happen if Hezbollah becomes the unrivalled source of power in Lebanon - how else, other than as farce, could such a conclusion be described?
Therefore, it is reasonable to speculate that IFI16 may undergo the same fate as the aforementioned Ro52 and Ro60 nuclear proteins in SGECs.
If we assume that the chloroplast genes in myco-heterotrophic Burmanniaceae undergo the same fate, then a reversal to autotrophy seems highly improbable.
Similar(54)
The same fate - beheading?
The new scheme risks the same fate.
Electricity users fear the same fate.
Might the same fate befall Mr Blair?
So will Newt Gingrich suffer the same fate?
More suggestions(2)
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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