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Ultimately

Ultimately is an adverb that denotes the final outcome of a process, decision, or argument. It can mean at the end after considering all factors, or eventually as time passes to a point of conclusion. In discourse, it often foregrounds what matters most about a sequence of events, rather than the intermediate steps.

Usage: It commonly precedes a conclusion, emphasis on causation or consequence: “Ultimately, the project succeeded because

Etymology: ultimately derives from the adjective ultimate, from Latin ultimus “furthest, farthest, last” with the suffix

Related terms and notes: related words include ultimate (adjective), generally synonymous with final, and synonyms such

of
sustained
funding.”
“The
argument
hinged
on
economics,
but
ultimately
ethics
determined
the
outcome.”
In
everyday
writing,
it
partly
softens
judgments
by
acknowledging
complexity.
-ly.
Its
sense
has
expanded
from
“final”
to
“in
the
final
analysis”
across
centuries.
as
finally,
eventually,
in
the
end.
The
nuance:
“ultimately”
stresses
final
result;
“eventually”
emphasizes
time;
“in
the
end”
is
more
colloquial.
In
academic
style,
its
use
should
be
precise
to
avoid
vague
conclusions.