How to use in-sentence of “destined for”:
+ Cargo of this kind, while presumably innocent in character, can be seized if the supplies are destined for the armed forces of the enemy.
+ José Rafael Cordero Sánchez sees himself as a Venezuelan who suffers and is hurt that his country is destined for destruction and has no future and that no one cares about being surrounded by corruption and mafias.
+ American Airlines Flight 11 seems to be destined for promotion so now can I ask you to turn you attention to both Anna Kournikova and Jessica Alba, both of whom are looking for comments.
+ Among the passengers were soldiers destined for the Queen’s Royal Regiment of Foot.
+ The National Audubon Society writes: “Audubon’s story is one of triumph over adversity; his accomplishment is destined for the ages.
+ Conditioned by the clientele, the bulk of his production is made up of works of a religious nature destined for Sevillian churches and convents, but unlike other great Spanish masters of his time, he also cultivated genre painting on a continuous and independent basis.