Word
Of
The
Day
culminate
culminate \KUL-muh-nayt\
verb
To culminate is to reach the end or the final result of something.
Culminate is usually used with
in or
with.
// Their efforts have
culminated in the discovery of a new treatment.
See the entry >
Examples:
“The grand emotions of these cartoons-come-to-life
culminate in huge song and dance numbers, the songs sung by the voices you know and love from the movies and the dances enhanced by the grace of topflight figure skating.” — Christopher Arnott,
The Hartford Courant, 11 Jan. 2026
Did you know?
When a star or other heavenly body culminates, it reaches its highest point above the horizon from the vantage point of an observer on the ground. The English verb
culminate was drawn (via Medieval Latin) from the Late Latin verb
culminare, meaning “to crown,” specifically for this astronomical application. Its ultimate root is the Latin noun
culmen, meaning “top.” Today, the word’s typical context is less lofty: it can mean “to reach a climactic point,” as in “a long career culminating in a prestigious award,” but it can also simply mean “to reach the end of something,” as in “a sentence culminating in a period.”