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The phrase "I eventually left" is a correct and usable part of a sentence in written English.
You can use this phrase when you want to describe a slow but certain action, often in a narrative context. For example: "After days of being stuck in the traffic jam, I eventually left and made it to my destination."
Exact(15)
I eventually left on good terms.
It was a comfortable relationship, but I eventually left him.
I was so shocked when I eventually left to go home.
MY boyfriend and I eventually left New York, moved upstate and got married.
I eventually left my Wall Street job and started working with and photographing homeless addicts in the South Bronx.
This summed up how I had come to think and feel about managing child protection and, although I eventually left this work behind, the residue of the experience stays with me.
Similar(43)
When I eventually leave, too, and cross the traffic on the hectic Finchley Road, the world is unhinged.
When I eventually leave Nashville, and am reminded that I've forgone Williams's invitation to stay at her house ("You'd have been the first journalist to see me without makeup"), I suddenly appreciate how much time she puts into her looks.
I eventually leave Jack on the curb outside a kebab shop and head over the road to Trademark Hotel: a notoriously violent spot with a bunch of smokers mingling around its entrance.
Every nanny I ever hired eventually left, even the ones I thought that I could not possibly live without.
From then on, I knew I'd eventually leave.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com