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  1. Dictionary
    ul·ti·ma·tum
    /ˌəltəˈmādəm/

    noun

    • 1. a final demand or statement of terms, the rejection of which will result in retaliation or a breakdown in relations: "their employers issued an ultimatum demanding an immediate return to work"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. May 3, 2011 · The meaning of ULTIMATUM is a final proposition, condition, or demand; especially : one whose rejection will end negotiations and cause a resort to force or other direct action. How to use ultimatum in a sentence.

  3. a threat in which a person or group of people are warned that if they do not do a particular thing, something unpleasant will happen to them. It is usually the last and most extreme in a series of actions taken to bring about a particular result: He gave her an ultimatum - she could either stop seeing Peter and come back to him or it was divorce.

  4. An ultimatum is a final demand attached to a threat, like "If you don't do it, I'll never speak to you again." Ultimatums are serious business. The noun ultimatum has Latin roots meaning "final" and that's still what the word means today.

  5. Ultimatum definition: a final, uncompromising demand or set of terms issued by a party to a dispute, the rejection of which may lead to a severance of relations or to the use of force.. See examples of ULTIMATUM used in a sentence.

  6. An ultimatum is a warning that unless someone acts in a particular way within a particular time limit, action will be taken against them.

  7. 1. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) a final communication by a party, esp a government, setting forth conditions on which it insists, as during negotiations on some topic. 2. any final or peremptory demand, offer, or proposal. [C18: from New Latin, neuter of ultimatus ultimate]

  8. ULTIMATUM definition: a statement that you will do something that will affect someone badly if they do not do what you…. Learn more.