Sentence examples for eventuated from inspiring English sources

'eventuated' is a correct word in written English
It means to occur as a result of certain circumstances or actions. Example: After months of planning and hard work, the event finally eventuated into a successful fundraiser for the charity.

Dictionary

eventuated

verb

Past of eventuate

Exact(17)

It will, though, take something for this pitch to change character sufficiently for there has been no pace in it, little evidence of erratic bounce that might have eventuated from any indentations from the first day, no swing and hardly any turn to speak of.

After the Civil War Tubman settled in Auburn and began taking in orphans and the elderly, a practice that eventuated in the Harriet Tubman Home for Indigent Aged Negroes.

Structuralism affected American cultural anthropology, harmonizing with idealist elements and the treatment of culture as first of all patterns of belief or ideas which eventuated in practical activity.

European intervention scaled back these gains, but a scramble for concessions in China eventuated.

She soon proved to be totally unsuited to the domestic routine of marriage, and after a year or so she was suffering from melancholia, which eventuated in complete nervous collapse.

What actually eventuated, however, was a vast quantity of flatulent chin music, studded with words like "communication," "relationship," and "chemistry".

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Similar(43)

The result in the rural seat of Indi could take several days to eventuate, with incumbent Sophie Mirabella remaining marginally ahead of her rival, the independent Cathy McGowan.

From a political rather than a legal perspective, malapportionment is usually considered "undemocratic" because it results in the overrepresentation or underrepresentation of certain sectors of the population and, consequently, may eventuate in public policies not acceptable to the majority of the electorate.

This centre relies on force to suppress opposition and to limit social developments that might eventuate in opposition.

Noah Webster, the lexicographer, gave his imprimatur to to appreciate (in value); to eventuate was popularised by Gouverneur Morris; and no less a hero than Washington is said to have launched to derange.

Another important difference is that the product of interaction in the public is public opinion, rather than the collective action or experience of collective ecstasy that eventuates from active and expressive crowds.

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