eventual
eventual — adjective
1. describes what finally happens or becomes true as the later outcome of a process
describes what finally happens or becomes true as the later outcome of a process, often after difficulties, delays, or sustained effort
The team celebrated their eventual victory after three seasons without a single win.
collocation: eventual victory
After months of tense talks, an eventual agreement was reached by both companies.
passive: eventual agreement was reached
Sahil could not have guessed the eventual outcome when he first began his research.
The eventual cost of the bridge repairs turned out to be double the original estimate.
Even the doctors were surprised by the patient's eventual recovery after the infection.
- final
more direct and common; 'final' can be used both attributively and predicatively ('the final chapter' / 'this is final'), while 'eventual' is attributive only
- ultimate
emphasises a final endpoint that nothing comes after; stronger sense of being last in a series, while 'eventual' focuses on the journey to reach that endpoint
- resulting
a participle rather than a true adjective; 'resulting' focuses on cause-and-effect, while 'eventual' emphasises the time or process leading up to the result
文法句型
eventual + noun
用法筆記
Attributive only — 'eventual' must always come before the noun it describes (e.g. 'eventual winner', NOT 'the winner was eventual'). Unlike 'final', it cannot be used predicatively after linking verbs.