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Discover LudwigThe phrase "eventually erode" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It is used to refer to something that decreases in strength, stability, or intensity over a long period of time. For example: The company's reputation eventually eroded as its customer service declined.
Exact(35)
Would it eventually erode the bottom line?
Neither camp disputes the inevitability that time and the mass market will eventually erode distinctions.
But Google's position in mobile could eventually erode as Chinese competitors have sought to develop alternatives to Android.
But the intertwined nature of the world's capital markets makes it likely that American compromises will eventually erode British insistence on higher capital standards.
Many Kindle owners have said the low price motivates them to buy more e-books, but publishers feared that the price would eventually erode their profits.
"This game will play itself out; everybody can't keep racing to add international service" because profits will eventually erode, Mr. Allen said.
Similar(25)
Feedback and open communication eventually eroded the hierarchy.
"The body is such an amazing machine, the way it evolves and eventually erodes.
This enforced secrecy eventually eroded the relationship, only for my ex to finally break the silence after the break up.
The banks' capital base was far too thin to protect them against the shocks in property markets that eventually eroded confidence in virtually all big banks in America and Europe.
The unrelenting Mosley eventually eroded the weary Taylor, who was rocked over and over and even crumbled to the canvas in the first round.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com