undoomed

undoomed

(ʌnˈduːmd)
adj
not doomed
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
After recounting his successful exploits at sea and his slaying of nine sea monsters, Beowulf remarks, Wyrd oft nered // unfaegene eorl, /ponne his ellen deah "Fate often spares / an undoomed man when his courage avails" (572b-573).
He is not incidentally undoomed as a result of wyrd's saving him because of his bravery at that moment, nor is he unfaege simply because he is not faege.
Fate oft preserves The undoomed earl, if his strength holds out.
The Must Be often helps an undoomed man when he is brave.
'Weird goeth ever as it must!' exclaims Beowulf; yet 'Fate often preserves an undoomed earl, if his courage is good'.
Dover, PA, February 02, 2013 --(PR.com)-- Cadmus House has published Undoomed Warrior: The Strange Case of Robert Lee and the "Gettysburg" Campaign by John Ellsworth Winter.
205 pages in length, Undoomed Warrior: The Strange Case of Robert Lee and the "Gettysburg" Campaign is being aggressively promoted to appropriate markets with a focus on the United States Civil War Period (1850-1877) history category.
Additionally, Undoomed Warrior can be ordered by retailers or wholesalers for the maximum trade discount price set by the author in quantities of ten or more from the Outskirts Press Direct bookstore at www.outskirtspress.com/bookstore.
"'Unfit for Earth, Undoomed for Heaven': The Genesis of Coppola's Byronic Dracula." LFQ 30.4 (2002): 271-78.
Somehow, the pair of my father and his captain seems undoomed, perhaps because weightier in rank, perhaps because, although lieutenants are fair game, captains like sergeants are taboo, having a rougher cynicism to them, or any cynicism at all.
/ unfaegne eorl ponne his ellen deah (fate often spares the undoomed man when his courage is good enough, Beowulf, 572b-73).
Or he is the "Wealdend" who holds sway over fatum and acts, in Beowulf, in a capacity greater than that of wyrd: "Swa moeg unfoege eade gedigan / wean ond wroecsid se de Waldendes / hyldo gehealdep!" [So may an undoomed man easily endure misery and exile who keeps the favor of the Lord] (2291-93a).