eventuate
Apparence
Étymologie
[modifier le wikicode]Verbe
[modifier le wikicode]Temps | Forme |
---|---|
Infinitif | to eventuate \i'ventʃʊeit\ |
Présent simple, 3e pers. sing. |
eventuates \i'ventʃʊeits\ |
Prétérit | eventuated \i'ventʃʊeit.ɪd\ |
Participe passé | eventuated \i'ventʃʊeit.ɪd\ |
Participe présent | eventuating \i'ventʃʊeit.ɪŋ\ |
voir conjugaison anglaise |
eventuate \iˈventʃʊeit\ transitif
- Déboucher, aboutir, conclure.
- Although Staley's plan did not eventuate, the next person to run the Ministry, Robert Ellicott, chose to hold a referendum on the issue.
- Is that to say we are against Free Trade? No, we are for Free Trade, because by Free Trade all economical laws, with their most astounding contradictions, will act upon a larger scale, upon the territory of the whole earth; and because from the uniting of all these contradictions in a single group, where they will stand face to face, will result the struggle which will itself eventuate in the empancipation of the proletariat. — (Karl Marx (Article du journal Northern Star), 1847, Marx Engels Collected Works Volume 6, 290)
- Reconciliation cannot eventuate or materialise until the proper legal procedures have been followed, that is without interference from external forces. — (Adi Koila Mara Nailatikau, Fiji Discours au Sénat, 22 octobre 2004)
Prononciation
[modifier le wikicode]- \iˈventʃʊeit\
- États-Unis : écouter « eventuate [eventuate] »