Definitions
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
- v. To reach the highest point or degree; climax: habitual antagonism that culminated in open hostility.
- v. To come to completion; end: Years of waiting culminated in a tearful reunion.
- v. Astronomy To reach the highest point above an observer's horizon. Used of stars and other celestial bodies.
- v. To bring to the point of greatest intensity or to completion; climax: The ceremony culminated a long week of preparation.
Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
- To come to or be on the meridian; be in the highest point of altitude, as a star, or, according to the usage of astronomers, reach either the highest or the lowest altitude.
- To reach the highest point, apex, or summit, literally or figuratively.
- n. Growing upward, as distinguished from a lateral growth: applied to the growth of corals.
Wiktionary
- v. intransitive, astronomy Of a heavenly body, to be at the highest point, reach its greatest altitude.
- v. intransitive To reach the (physical) summit, highest point, peak etc.
- v. intransitive To reach a climax; to come to the decisive point (especially as an end or conclusion).
- v. transitive To finalize, bring to a conclusion, form the climax of.
GNU Webster's 1913
- v. To reach its highest point of altitude; to come to the meridian; to be vertical or directly overhead.
- v. To reach the highest point, as of rank, size, power, numbers, etc.
- adj. Growing upward, as distinguished from a lateral growth; -- applied to the growth of corals.
WordNet 3.0
- v. bring to a head or to the highest point
- v. rise to, or form, a summit
- v. reach the highest or most decisive point
- v. end, especially to reach a final or climactic stage
- v. reach the highest altitude or the meridian, of a celestial body
Etymologies
- Recorded since 1647, from Medieval Latin culminatus, the past participle of culminare ("to crown"), from Latin culmen ("peak, the highest point"), older form columen ("top, summit"), from a Proto-Indo-European base *kel- "to project". (Wiktionary)
- Late Latin culmināre, culmināt-, from Latin culmen, culmin-, summit; see kel-2 in Indo-European roots. (American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition)
Examples
“What this will do - and I hate to use the word culminate - but this will culminate in a strategic plan and then go into an implementation phase.”
“Stalls for the thirty-eight-member choir face the congregation, and vaulted ceilings culminate in a magnificent triangular stained glass window—the only artwork in sight.”
“By the way, I'm delighted that similar public-engagement strategies will be broadly leveraged during the USA Science & Engineering Festival, which will culminate October 23-24 with an expo on the National Mall.”
“The whole thing will culminate in New York," Ms. McGregor said.”
“Deal flow has returned since July ... and most of the deals will culminate into orders in October-February," HCL Technologies Chief Executive Vineet Nayar told reporters at a news conference.”
“Pyongyang was in a festive mood as North Korea marked the anniversary of the founding of the ruling party with a weekend of celebrations that will culminate in a massive military parade Sunday.”
“But the storyline he's a part of will apparently culminate with Hart facing Vince McMahon in a "street fight" at WrestleMania in March.”
“Either this or it may culminate with a qualitatively new form of confrontation.”
The Huffington Post: Raghida Dergham: Abbas and a "Civil" Intifada in International Bodies
“He seemed to know the precise time required for the turn to culminate in disaster, and in the meantime he utilized the false footing itself for the momentary earth-contact necessary to carry him on into safety.”
“SPRING SNAPSHOT: The Ragin 'Cajuns begin practice on March 3, and spring drills will culminate with the spring game on March 27.”
Lists
These user-created lists contain the word ‘culminate’.
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GRE 2014
abase, abate, abdicate, aberrant, abeyance, abhor, abjure, abortive, abound, abrasive, abreast, abridge and 1577 more...
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Thresholds
we are all just passing through.
(boundaries, portals and liminal spaces/times)cockcrow, interface, thin line, portal, postern, littoral, interstice, port, membrane, skin, crepuscule, dawn and 309 more...
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Words
My list of words.
veritable, facetious, nadir, quixotic, apropos, acquiesce, ostensible, insipid, egregious, inveterate, coax, adroit and 409 more...
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GRE
abate, abdicate, aberrant, abhor, abjure, abrasive, abridge, abstain, acme, activism, adhere, admonish and 195 more...
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Words grabbed from real life conversa...
If I've seen it, heard it, or marvelled at it, I'll stick it here.
cruft, ermine, redundant, shakespearean, camino, marvelous, stupendous, chagrin, shaven, sleek, smug, stillness and 325 more...
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newGRE
mostly from magoosh
imbue, verge on, nonchalant, deliberate, timorous, futile, provisional, dissect, checked, tinged, alluring, visionary and 1046 more...
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NTDW1
template, modal, sublingual, tandem, polycentric, septuagenarian, token, irrevocable, denotive, augural, aberrant, phlebotomy and 1188 more...
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GMAT
part of speech, frown, brow, immensely, immense, incomprehensible, toil, concision, concise, proper noun, hyphenated, dash and 190 more...
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SAT PSAT ALPHABETICAL C
cabal, cache, cacophony, cadaverous, cadence, cajole, callous, callow, calumny, calvary, camaraderie, canard and 199 more...
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my dictionary
able, abnormally, abroad, absent, abstract, acceptable, acceptance, access, accessible, accession, according to, account and 4551 more...
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Sat Vocabulary List
abandon, abash, abate, abjure, ablution, abnegate, abominable, aboriginal, abortive, abrade, abridge, abrogate and 2155 more...
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thricedotted's Words
schadenfreude, vanquish, calumny, obsequious, rhapsody, expostulate, promontory, bordello, quintessence, catharsis, recapitulation, myriad and 937 more...
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Words to remember
adventive, affectation, ambiguous, anachronism, anesis, antithetic, apostasy, attenuate, authenticity, autodidact, -fic, bandolier and 146 more...
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Norman Lewis
All Words
ebullient, eccentric, eclectic, edify, efface, effusion, egalitarian, egocentric, egoist, egregious, elicit, elliptical and 907 more...
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Palabrarium
The delicious wonderful words that I love terribly dearly and without which, the world would be a less inventive and worthwhile place. Also, ostensibly, the reason 1984 and esperanto secretly suck.
panoply, footpad, piccalilli, snickersnee, marl, hispid, greengage, slumgullion, golliwog, mumbletypeg, circumlocution, quiescent and 366 more...
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random
cardcase, nupital, self-reformation, thwart, hemochromatosis, multiplex, reprieve, lucrative, instance, guzzle, pursuant, maverick and 13 more...
Tweets
Looking for tweets for culminate.

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