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"tragic culmination" is correct and can be used in written English
It is typically used to describe an ironic or unfortunate event that serves as the climax of a sequence of events. For example, "After months of preparation, the rehearsal dinner ended in a tragic culmination when the groom's brother announced his surprise engagement."
Exact(4)
Mr. Novick, for his part, called "Salesman" the sequel to "Fiddler on the Roof" — the tragic culmination of the immigrant's American dream.
If the Supreme Court reverses its 2003 decision to uphold affirmative action on campus and outlaw any consideration of race in admissions decisions, it would be radical — a tragic culmination of decades of backtracking on racial justice.
To those of us who grew up in northern Europe, and especially Britain, it is the tragic culmination of a fractious political and intellectual debate that goes back almost a quarter of a century.
In the eyes of many, the Grenfell Tower fire was the tragic culmination of austerity, a system that prioritised cost-cutting over people's lives.
Similar(56)
A year ago, the appearance into the world of Eleanor's child seemed the culmination of a tragic slide away from her family and into juvenile detention, foster care and mean streets.
And unlike the first one, where the love between Sarah and Reese is the natural culmination of that storyline (as does its tragic conclusion), here it feels like the machinations of a screenwriter, giving the pair Moonlighting-esque "will they, won't they" banter instead of an actual arc to follow.
The culmination came Saturday.
Hardly tragic.
Or tragic.
Just tragic".
Kinda tragic.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com