"At last" = "finally".
ex: "I'm ready, we can leave now!"
"At last! The taxi has been waiting for more than 15 minutes!"
or : The answer came at last; we were so eager to read it that we tore open the envelope.
or: "Aha, now I get it!"
"At last! I didn't know how to make you understand what I was saying".
"Eventually" means something like "in the end".
ex: He refused to speak to his rival, but he gave in eventually and agreed to meet him in...."
or : After three failed attempts, she eventually got her driving licence in 1978.
"At last" implies that something has finally happened after a period of waiting or anticipation. "Eventually" suggests that something will happen at some point in the future, but the timing is uncertain.
they are posher
In final stand you keep your weapon you were holding and eventually you can get up if you don't get shot. In last stand you pull out an M9 pistol and after about 15-20 seconds you automatically die. :P
Sometimes
There is no difference Galilei is Galileo's last name.
When you are traveling to Singapore you advance your watch/phone, and when you are traveling to Manchester you turn it back. When traveling between the last Sunday of March and the last Sunday of October the difference is seven hours, and when traveling between the last Sunday of October and the last Sunday of March the difference is eight hours.
there is no difference between both the armies because both of them are bad.
the only real difference is that the last airbender is the american version and the legend of aang is the european version....
There is no defference between the two...
Yes. The difference is that last little 16th of an inch.
In my point of view, there is no difference between diploma and associate's degree, since they,both last in two years. thanks Asad Abulle
Blood The Last Vampire was the movie that inspired the manga Blood+
A first name is the given name that typically comes before the last name in Western naming conventions, while the last name is the family name passed down through generations. Together, they make up a person's full name.