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The phrase "after that eventually" is not correct and sounds redundant in written English.
It can be used when trying to indicate a sequence of events, but the word "eventually" already implies a sense of time following "after that."
Example: "We finished the project, and after that eventually, we celebrated our success."
Alternatives: "afterward" or "subsequently".
Exact(2)
He moved around for a while after that, eventually settling in a tiny two-bedroomed flat in north London, where he lives alone to this day.
Doing "mechanical engineering one week and physics the next week, then … a patent on copying equipment, and … defibrillators the week after that" eventually exhausted him.
Similar(57)
"It is the accumulation of one environmental insult after another that eventually shows its effect".
It was a flare-up in bond yields, after all, that eventually pushed Greece into the arms of the International Monetary Fund in the spring, and sent the euro on a downward spiral against other major currencies from which it has only recently recovered.
It was the return of mammals, after all, that eventually produced the modern giants of the sea: whales.
These results suggest that VEGF expanded a pool of proliferating NG2 positive cells after SCI that eventually differentiated into mature oligodendrocytes.
Already in 1970, it was suggested that some patients may show seizures after surgery that eventually remit some months to years later, that is, the 'running down phenomenon'.
But yesterday, 30 years and one day after the burglary that eventually brought down Richard M. Nixon's presidency, Mr. Dean faced one of those only-in-New-York crowds.
Mr. Hevesi resigned in late 2006 after pleading guilty to a felony related to his use of state workers as drivers for his ailing wife, after an investigation that eventually broadened to include corruption in the state pension fund.
The pace of Fraser was a new threat, and he sparked a move after 95 minutes that eventually saw McGinn flash wide of Samson's left-hand post.
After the dissolution of Poland, a Polish officer serving under Napoleon penned a song that eventually — after the country's post-World War I resurrection — became the country's national anthem.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com