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résulte

Résulte is the third-person singular present indicative form of the French verb résulter, meaning to result or to follow as a consequence. It is used to indicate that a conclusion, outcome, or consequence emerges from a preceding fact, condition, or set of data. The expression is common in formal, analytical, and scientific writing.

Usage typically centers on how conclusions are drawn from information. The standard construction is il résulte

Grammatical notes emphasize that résulter is a regular -er verb. Its present participle is résuidant, more accurately

de,
meaning
it
follows
from
or
results
from.
Another
frequent
form
is
ce
qui
résulte
de,
introducing
the
aspect
that
follows
from
something.
In
very
formal
context,
one
may
encounter
il
en
résulte
que,
which
translates
to
as
a
result,
it
follows
that.
In
everyday
speech,
speakers
may
opt
for
less
formal
expressions
such
as
cela
montre
que
or
on
peut
déduire
que.
résultant,
and
its
past
participle
is
résolu
or
résulte?
No,
the
proper
past
participle
of
résulter
is
résolu?
This
is
a
potential
pitfall;
for
clarity,
consult
a
reliable
conjugation
resource.
The
related
noun
is
résultat,
meaning
result,
and
the
adjective
form
résulter
exists
primarily
in
its
verbal
uses.
The
overall
relationship
is
that
résulte
signals
a
conclusion
drawn
from
something
else,
with
résultat
serving
as
the
noun
for
the
outcome.