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  1. the fact of something good happening by chance, rather than being planned, or an example of this: The victim's chances of getting compensation often depend more on fortuity than on any law. They were strangers who had been brought together by the fortuities of war. Fewer examples.

  2. haphazard Her cabinets were stuffed with a haphazard jumble of books, clothes, tins of soup, and papers. coincidental Any similarity between the characters in this book and real people, living or dead, is purely coincidental. inadvertent A good editor will catch and correct all inadvertent typos in a text.

  3. The meaning of FORTUITY is the quality or state of being fortuitous. the quality or state of being fortuitous; a chance event or occurrence… See the full definition

  4. Fortuity definition: the state or quality of being fortuitous; fortuitous character.. See examples of FORTUITY used in a sentence.

  5. fortuity in American English. (fɔrˈtuːɪti, -ˈtjuː-) noun Word forms: plural for 2, 3 -ties. 1. the state or quality of being fortuitous; fortuitous character. 2. an accidental occurrence. 3. an instance of great luck or good fortune.

  6. Definitions of fortuity. noun. anything that happens suddenly or by chance without an apparent cause. synonyms: accident, chance event, stroke. see more.

  7. Synonyms for FORTUITY: uncertainty, fortuitousness, randomness, accident, circumstance, luck, happenstance, hazard; Antonyms of FORTUITY: purpose, intention, intent, plan, design, scheme, outline.

  8. lucky; fortunate. a series of fortuitous events that advanced her career. SYNONYMS 1. incidental. See accidental. USAGE fortuitous has developed in sense from “happening by chance” to “happening by lucky chance” to simply “lucky, fortunate.”.

  9. Define fortuity. fortuity synonyms, fortuity pronunciation, fortuity translation, English dictionary definition of fortuity. n. pl. for·tu·i·ties 1. A chance occurrence or event. 2. The quality or condition of being fortuitous. American Heritage® Dictionary of the English...

  10. But the fact that fortuitous sounds like a blend of fortunate and felicitous (“happily suited to an occasion”) likely led to a second meaning of “fortunate, lucky,” with the seeds of the newer sense perhaps planted by writers applying overtones of good fortune to something that is a random occurrence.