Dictionary
are climactic
adjective
Of, pertaining to, or constituting a climax; reaching a decisive moment or point of greatest tension.
Exact(1)
Traditionally, big artists release big songs in hopes of a big album; radio plays and plays, stoking anticipation, and release dates are climactic as fans collectively dig down the single's rabbit hole.
Similar(59)
That day in May was climactic for both clubs.
"There won't be a D-Day that is climactic," he said.
There were climactic uses of "Joan Baez" and "the K.K.K". that didn't seem exactly right.
Live performances, often over 15 minutes, were climactic moments of any Zeppelin concert.
So even if the race is climactic, that may not be enough to make voting relevant to a wider audience.
Mr. Setzer and Mr. Finckel exchanged limpid phrases during the glowing Adagio cantabile; the only thing missing from the mounting pomp in the Allegro vivace was climactic cannon fire.
Oversold can always get more oversold, but there is potential for Friday's action to be climactic, especially combined with pullback to the support levels cited above.
Williams felt a rapid decline in the quality of music with the title track, which she believed should have been "climactic, inventive and a little bit trippy with such a title" but found its tempo to be slow and mundane.
Che's final hours as a prisoner, his body depleted but his faith in revolution unshaken, are anti-climactic.
There is a climactic shootout.
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