Crossword clues for end
end
- Place to burn a candle?
- Peyton Manning target
- Pet Shop Boys "West ___ Girls"
- NFL position
- NFL lineman
- Moon unit
- Last word?
- First or final cut piece
- Final curtain
- Far point
- Fabric fragment
- Every streetcar line has one
- Drop the curtain on
- Bring to closure
- Bring down the curtain on
- Bitter __
- "It's not the ___ of the world"
- "Howards ____"
- "30" to an editor
- ___ on a high note (finish well)
- Write "finis"
- Wrap things up
- Wrap it up
- Word with tight or split
- Word with tight or loose
- Word with loose or tight
- Word with bitter or tail
- Word with "rear" or "year"
- Word before game or user
- Word after tight or loose
- Word after bitter or dead
- Where to join the line
- Where to get in line?
- Where to get in line
- Type of zone
- Tight or defensive, e.g
- This clue's place, aptly enough
- The final word in storybooks
- The final word in movies
- Target for Tom Brady
- Target for Peyton Manning
- Tackle's linemate
- Suffix location
- Stop doing
- Spot to stop
- Something to keep in sight
- Rob Gronkowski's position
- Reason for being
- Rarely-used computer key
- Rarely used computer key
- Pet Shop Boys song "West ___ Girls"
- Opposite of beginning
- Only good part of a bad movie?
- Offensive player farthest from the QB
- Offensive or defensive gridder
- Möbius strip's lack
- Loose __
- Linkin Park "Waiting for the ___"
- Last word, in literature
- Last word of a film?
- Last word in movies?
- Last word in literature?
- Last word in films?
- Last section
- Land's ___ (southwesternmost point of England)
- Kind of table or user
- It may be bitter or dead
- It could be tight or loose
- Home key neighbor
- Gridiron speedster
- Go last
- Furthest point
- Furthermost point
- Football receiver
- Finish in the DEN?
- Final section
- Exterminate — object
- Either extreme of a loaf
- Drop it
- Dead-___ job
- Dead ___ (cul-de-sac)
- Brett Favre target
- Be over with
- Apt answer for this puzzle location
- "Witches of East ___" (Lifetime series)
- "To what ___?"
- "Tight" or "loose" follower
- "Tight" NFL position
- "This Is the ___" (2013 James Franco movie)
- "The ___ of Innocence"
- "The ___ is near"
- "Split" follower
- "I'm at the ___ of my rope"
- "Howards ___" (1982)
- "30," to an editor
- "___ of the Road" (Boyz II Men song)
- "___ of Days" (Schwarzenegger film)
- -30-, to an editor
- ___ on a high note
- Zone or table lead-in
- Z, for the alphabet
- Z, alphabet-wise
- Yusuf Islam "In the ___"
- You've just reached it
- You'll reach it after 71 more clues
- Write finis to
- Word with tail or back
- Word with product or table
- Word with play or run
- Word with living or bitter
- Word with game or point
- Word with deep or tight
- Word with bitter or dead
- Word with "living" or "dead"
- Word with "business" or "bitter"
- Word printed on a maze
- Word before result
- Word after loose or tight
- Word after living or receiving
- Word after deep or tight
- Word after deep or dead
- Word after dead or deep
- Word after bitter or business
- Word after "loose" or "tight"
- Word after "living" or "dead"
- Word after "living," "tight" or "dead"
- Word "split" in this puzzle's eight longest answers
- Wind it up
- Where this is
- Where this appears, appropriately
- Where this answer is, appropriately
- Where many enter a line
- Where a tunnel opens
- When the murderer is revealed, often
- When the murderer is revealed in mysteries, often
- When Porky Pig says "That's all, folks!"
- When credits roll
- What's last
- What you don't want a good show to do
- What this is two from
- What this clue is, with "the"
- What curtains may signify
- What 30 means, in printers' slang
- U2 "Until the ___ of the World"
- Typical pass catcher
- Tunnel terminus
- Traveling Wilburys: "___ of the Line"
- Traveling Wilburys "___ of the Line"
- Tom Brady target
- Time for the credits
- Tight or loose follower
- This, with "the"
- This puzzle's last entry, fittingly
- This clue, to this puzzle
- THIS ___ UP (words on a crate)
- Third player from the center
- The last word in some stories
- The last word in movies?
- The Doors "The ___"
- The bitter ___
- The 29th, for February 2020
- The ___ of history
- The ___ (appropriately)
- The ___
- Testaverde target
- Target of some football passes
- Target for Dan Marino
- Target for Aaron Rodgers
- Tackle's line mate
- Stopping poin
- Sometimes it's bitter
- Something sometimes split
- Share of a task
- Shallow ___
- Screen catcher, sometimes
- Ring's lack
- Redundant follower of "tail"
- Reach the finale
- Reach the denouement
- Reach its destination, as a trip
- Quarterback target
- Quarterback sacker, perhaps
- QB's target
- QB's frequent target
- Punch line, say
- Prime-rib cut
- Player close to a linebacker
- Place for some notes
- Pierre's "fin," to Peter
- Pi doesn't have one
- Phish "Possum, your ___ is the road"
- Person looking for bombs?
- Period, with "the"
- Pearl Jam "The ___"
- Passer's target, maybe
- Pass target, sometimes
- Part of the line always saved for you
- Part of the "Line" the Traveling Wilburys were going to
- Part of a movie where the credits roll
- Page Down neighbor
- Opposite of start
- One working on a line
- One of eleven
- One might be tight
- One may be tight
- One can be loose or tight
- Omega, alphabetically
- Often-unwanted slice of bread
- Not the beginning
- Neighbor of a tackle
- My Chemical Romance "To the ___"
- Mudvayne album "The ___ of All Things to Come"
- Member of an NFL line
- Maze bottom word
- Make defunct
- Loose or bitter follower
- London's West ___
- London's East ___
- London setting of "Call the Midwife" ("East")
- London docks area, the East ...
- London Cockney area, the East ...
- Linkin Park "In the ___"
- Line-of-scrimmage position
- Likely pass receiver
- Last word, say
- Last word of movies?
- Last word of many books
- Last word in film
- Last word at the cineplex?
- Last piece of bread to eat, often
- Last in a sequence
- Last entry in this puzzle, fittingly
- Last chapter
- Kind of table or run
- Kind of bridge play
- Killers "How did it ___ up like this, it was only a kiss"
- Key below Home, on a PC
- Key below "Home" on a PC
- Jim Morrison song, with "The"
- It might be bitter
- It may be split or loose
- It may be reached while binge-watching
- It may be loose or tight
- It may be bitter?
- It can be bitter
- Inning : baseball :: ___ : curling
- Infinity doesn't have one
- His job is always on the line
- His career is on the line
- High-__: upscale
- High-___ (upscale)
- Heel in a bakery
- Have a season finale, say
- Grand finale
- Get finished
- Front, for one
- Fourth word of a Doors classic
- Foreigner "Until the ___ of Time"
- Fitting last word in a crossword grid
- Finishing point
- Final word, often
- Final stopping point
- Final result, ... product
- Final piece
- Final cause
- Eventually, in the ...
- Event studied in eschatology, with "the"
- Eternity doesn't have one
- English fin
- Elton John "Club at the ___ of the Street"
- Either of two on a defensive line
- Doors classic, with "The"
- Delete key neighbor
- Defensive ___
- Deep or book
- Deep ___ (pool area)
- Decide not to continue
- December, yearwise
- December 31, for 2020
- Dec. 31, to a year
- Curtain call time
- Curling period
- Curling division
- Crusty slice of bread
- Crusty bread piece
- Continue no longer
- Computer key under Home
- Come to an untimely ___
- Come to an ___ (conclude)
- Come to a finishing point
- Come to a finish
- Come to a finale
- Come to a conclusion (appropriately)
- Coincidentally and aptly, it was also yesterday's last Down answer
- Coda's place
- Close out
- Close or complete
- Cliffhanger's spot
- Caboose's location on a train
- Burnt barbecue bit
- Bread slice with lots of crust
- Bread heel
- Book's last word, often
- Book's last word
- Book or tag
- Bitter part?
- Bitter or business follower
- Bitter follower, sometimes
- Beginning's counterpart
- Backside ... or a hint to the puzzle theme
- Author's last word
- At wits' ___
- At the ___ of one's rope
- Apt puzzle answer, in this case
- Apt last answer
- Appropriate answer for this spot in the puzzle
- Apocalyptica w/ Gavin Rossdale "___ of Me"
- And finally, the brave solver finished the crossword puzzle. The ___
- An eligible pass receiver
- Alice in Chains "Gonna ___ up a big ole pile of them bones"
- Alice in Chains "Gonna ___ up a big ole pile a them bones"
- After the face off, bow to pressure and then stop (3)
- 30, in the newsroom
- + or -, for a battery
- *Last word in many books (... 1 to 2)
- "Zone" or "table" lead-in
- "West ___ Girls" (1986 #1 hit for the Pet Shop Boys)
- "Until the ___ of the World" U2
- "This Is the ___" (apocalyptic James Franco comedy of 2013)
- "This Is the ___" (2013 Seth Rogen movie)
- "This Is the ___" (2013 movie)
- "The World's __": 2013 sci-fi comedy
- "The World's ___" (2013 Simon Pegg apocalyptic comedy)
- "The ___ of the Tour" (2015 Jason Segel movie)
- "The ___ of the Affair"
- "The ___ is near!" (prophetic warning)
- "The ___ is near!"
- "Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's ___" (2007 movie)
- "Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's ___" (2007 film)
- "Journeys ___ in lovers meeting."
- "Journey's ___"
- "Its the ___ of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)" (R.E.M. song)
- "It's the ___ of the world as we know it"
- "In the ___ ..."
- "I'm at my wits' ___!"
- "I will ___ you!" (threat from a movie villain or an intense gamer)
- "I Don't Want This Night to ___" (2011 Luke Bryan country hit)
- "Howards ___" (Forster novel)
- "Howards ___" (1992 Oscar winner)
- "Howards ___" (1992 Emma Thompson movie)
- "Howard's ___" (Oscar winner of 1992)
- "Happily ever after," for many a fairy tale
- "Gronk" of the Patriots is one
- "From the ___ of the World"
- "Every new beginning comes from some other beginning's ___ ..." (Semisonic)
- "Down at the ___ of Lonely Street at Heartbreak Hotel"
- "Childhood's ___" Kiss
- "Childhood's ___" (Arthur C. Clarke novel)
- "30" to editors
- "30" in editing
- "___ of the Line" Traveling Wilburys
- "___ of the line"
- 'When will it all --?'
- '04 Cure hit "The ___ of the World"
- And the other
- ___-around (football play)
- ____ of the line
- ___ table
- Interface part of a program
- Something unfinished
- The ultimate employer endures after swapping two characters around
- A miscellany
- Very much a lack of purpose
- Donne composed a lot
- Dope stashed in order for engine part
- Last part: nurse about to suffer
- Plan to welcome His Excellency at last
- Part of pool table ultimately breaks bank
- What Mayerhof and Zamenhof do that’s final
- Arrive (at); finish (with)
- Finish piece of satire, ignoring introduction
- Finish in French in front of Irish politicians
- Finish (with)
- In French, sent back dessert to finish
- Turn out to be point ahead
- After exams regularly nurse in part of capital
- Windup
- Finale (and fittingly, the last entry in this puzzle)
- Closure
- Purpose in view
- Epilogue's place
- Wind up or wind down
- Word before and after "to"
- Remnant
- Football lineman
- Hindquarters
- Curling inning
- Goal
- Pass receiver
- It may be dead
- Expiration
- Ultimate point
- Kind of user
- Get rid of
- Intention
- It may be living or dead
- Armageddon
- Coda's place in a score
- Lineman furthest from the center
- Cricket wicket
- Boundary line
- Unpopular slice
- Doomsday, with "the"
- Part to grab hold of, maybe
- Tackle's neighbor on the line
- Finish line
- Curtains, with "the"
- Objective
- Stopping point
- Omega, in a way
- Conclusion
- Outer limit
- Deli discard
- Exterior lineman
- Annihilation
- Terminal point
- Quietus
- Denouement
- Pull the plug on
- Tip or top
- Tackle's teammate
- Cut out
- Sign off
- Demise
- Call a halt to
- Stoppage
- Period's place in a sentence
- "Bitter" part
- Not-so-desirable bread slice
- Word before and after "over"
- Call off, as a relationship
- Put the kibosh on
- Upshot
- Border
- Button on some cell phones
- Loaf part
- Cutoff point
- Extremity
- It may be bitter or loose
- Last page
- Terminus
- One may be on the line
- Last part (appropriately)
- Destroy
- This, appropriately
- Run out
- See 65-Across
- Come to a halt
- Halt
- Quash
- Wrap up
- ___-all
- Place to stop
- Tail __
- Termination
- Top or bottom
- Bankrupt
- Give the coup de grГўce
- Bitter ___
- See 58-Down
- Defensive footballer
- Swan song
- Cut short
- Extreme point
- One may be dead
- Judgment Day, e.g
- At wit's ___
- Eliminate
- Break off
- Apt answer for this clue
- Close down
- Finish up
- Stands for things
- Wind up or down
- Tug-of-war position
- Maze goal
- Rear
- Sign-off
- Dissolve, as a partnership
- Cut off
- Put a stopper on
- Wipe out
- With 41-Across, go out nicely
- Prime rib cut
- Heel of a loaf
- What boring things never seem to do
- Caboose, e.g.
- T formation participant
- Tight ___ (football position)
- Potential pass target
- Player next to a tackle
- Bring to a halt
- With "of" plus 49-Down, momentous time
- See 3-Down
- Culmination
- Defensive ___ (football position)
- Terminate a relationship
- Shut down
- "The ___," next-to-last song on "Abbey Road," ironically
- Fulfillment
- Share of responsibility
- Squelch
- This, for example, with "the"
- What this is, fittingly
- Cessation
- Knock off
- One may be tight or defensive
- Killers "It started out with a kiss, how did it ___ up like this"
- Suspend
- *Finish
- Last bit
- Wind down or wind up
- Not go on
- Stop going
- The ___ [fittingly]
- Möbius strip's lack
- Wideout, in football
- Maze's goal
- Shut off
- Discontinue
- Target of some passes
- Curtains
- PC key below Home
- Bottom of the ninth, usually
- With 18-Across, software developer's concern
- "___ of discussion!"
- Consummate
- Living or dead follower
- Word with living or dead
- Hindmost
- One may get a pass
- Not continue
- When the credits roll
- Call it a day
- Word with deep or dead
- Certain pick in 17-Across
- December 31, e.g.
- Bottom of the ninth, say
- Many an eligible receiver
- ___ of the line
- Patootie
- Squash
- A O doesn't have one
- One may be bitter
- Appropriate answer for this clue
- Crusty bread slice
- Ruin
- Adjourn
- Maze word
- Last song recorded by all four Beatles, with "the"
- Stew ___
- Come to a close
- A boundary marking the extremities of something
- A position on the line of scrimmage
- A piece of cloth that is left over after the rest has been used or sold
- The last section of a communication
- The part you are expected to play
- The surface at either extremity of a three-dimensional object
- A final state
- A final part or section
- Either extremity of something that has length
- The concluding parts of an event or occurrence
- One of two places from which people are communicating to each other
- "Cleaning product with the slogan "It's that fast"
- Give the coup de grâce
- Desinence
- Sake
- Offensive one, at times
- Eternity lacks this
- Stallworth's position
- Pigskin chaser
- Tight position?
- Aim
- See 57-Across
- Type of table or zone
- Outcome
- Sometimes it is bitter
- Complete
- "And by opposing ___ them?" Hamlet
- Pass catcher
- Conclude
- Zone for gridders
- Fragment
- Forster's "Howards ___"
- Last word, at times
- Wide receiver
- Caboose's place
- He's on the line
- Book part
- Leftover
- Book's final word
- QB's target, often
- He may be tight
- Object
- Finalize
- Kind of play, in bridge
- Last word on the silver screen, sometimes
- The last word?
- It might not be in sight
- Football position: defensive ___
- Result of a coup de grâce
- It's sometimes bitter
- Period of play in curling
- Marino target
- "Happy ___," 1977 musical
- ___ product
- Eligible pass receiver
- "Howards ___," Forster novel
- Word with tight and open
- Fate
- Consequence
- Word with head or tail
- Word with split or tight
- Like some products
- Split or tight Jet
- This Across answer, appropriately
- Word with tag or rear
- Where this word comes
- The ultimate state
- Tight ___, in football
- Player who may be tight
- Either half of a domino
- Where this word belongs
- What a checkmate causes
- Last word in many books
- Word with run or play
- Kind of product
- ___ line (court boundary)
- Means to an ___
- Football player next to a tackle
- Peroration
- Culminate
- Bitter or dead
- Limiting aspect
- Sinclair's "World's ___"
- Word with rear or tight
- Abrogate
- Receiver, frequently
- A cricket wicket
- Finite point
- Split or tight follower
- Grid lineman
- Word with front or rear
- Minstrel man
- He's often tight, in football
- Put a stop to
- Last straw
- Kind of table or zone
- Split or tight one
- Cease all action
- See 23 Across
- Word with tail or dead
- Priestley's "Eden ___"
- Elway target
- This may be tight or loose
- Position for Russ Francis
- He may be split
- Close result
- Close finish
- Cleaning product with the slogan "It's that fast"
- Exterminate - object
- Object, being in French dungeon at the beginning
- Swimmer, 20, after leaving home
- Stop a goal
- Finish the season tired ultimately
- Finish part of bowls match
- Finish off goal
- Finish letter to daughter
- Final stages
- Aim to finish
- Put a stop to the main round, ultimately
- Destroy object
- Death of Venus and Adonis, originally when 2?
- Transmit, dropping header, and stop
- Oklahoma city
- Computer keyboard key
- Keyboard key
- Break up
- Fizzle out
- Call it quits
- Go kaput
- Sew up
- Kind of paper
- Go no further
- Finish off
- Caboose's position
- Nip in the bud
- Bring to a close
- Gridiron position
- Final part
- Concluding part
- Famous last word
- Week finish?
- Phase out
- Draw to a close
- Stamp out
- Kind of zone
- Come to a conclusion?
- Caboose, e.g
- Word with split or tail
- Put a halt to
- Cut it out
- Fade out
- Stop it
- December 31, e.g
- Dead-___ street
- Close up
- Circle's lack
- Word with run or result
- Desired result
- Caboose's spot
- Table type
- Participant in some receptions
- Means justifier
- It may be in sight
- Go "pfft"
- Get done with
- "This ___ up"
- "The ___ is in sight"
- Quarterback's target
- Last stage
- Lands' ___ (clothing retailer)
- His job is on the line
- Give up on
- Come to a stop
- Author's last word?
- Last stop
- Go off the deep ___
- From beginning to ___
- Defensive position
- Bring the curtain down on
- Beginning's opposite
- Without ___
- The last word, often
- See the light at the ___ of the tunnel
- Scrimmage participant
- Nothing follows it
- Maze objective
- Final phase
- Final chapter
- Draw the curtain on
- Do the final step of
- Deep place?
- Certain keyboard key
- Business ___
- Bring to a conclusion
- Back __
- At the ___ of the line
- "Howards ___" (1992 movie)
- "All good things must come to an ___"
- ___ zone (part of a football field)
- __ game
- Word with all or result
- Word after living or dead
- Wind (up)
- What a Möbius strip lacks
- Type of zone or table
- Type of result
- To the bitter ___ (until the finish)
- This is it
- Start's opposite
- Reach a conclusion
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
End \End\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Ended; p. pr. & vb. n. Ending.]
-
To bring to an end or conclusion; to finish; to close; to terminate; as, to end a speech. ``I shall end this strife.''
--Shak.On the seventh day God ended his work.
--Gen. ii. 2. To form or be at the end of; as, the letter k ends the word back.
-
To destroy; to put to death. ``This sword hath ended him.''
--Shak.To end up, to lift or tilt, so as to set on end; as, to end up a hogshead.
End \End\, v. i. To come to the ultimate point; to be finished; to come to a close; to cease; to terminate; as, a voyage ends; life ends; winter ends.
End \End\ ([e^]nd), n. [OE. & AS. ende; akin to OS. endi, D. einde, eind, OHG. enti, G. ende, Icel. endir, endi, Sw. ["a]nde, Dan. ende, Goth. andeis, Skr. anta. [root]208. Cf. Ante-, Anti-, Answer.]
-
The extreme or last point or part of any material thing considered lengthwise (the extremity of breadth being side); hence, extremity, in general; the concluding part; termination; close; limit; as, the end of a field, line, pole, road; the end of a year, of a discourse; put an end to pain; -- opposed to beginning, when used of anything having a first part.
Better is the end of a thing than the beginning thereof.
--Eccl. vii. 8. -
Point beyond which no procession can be made; conclusion; issue; result, whether successful or otherwise; conclusive event; consequence.
My guilt be on my head, and there an end.
--Shak.O that a man might know The end of this day's business ere it come!
--Shak. -
Termination of being; death; destruction; extermination; also, cause of death or destruction.
Unblamed through life, lamented in thy end.
--Pope.Confound your hidden falsehood, and award Either of you to be the other's end.
--Shak.I shall see an end of him.
--Shak. -
The object aimed at in any effort considered as the close and effect of exertion; ppurpose; intention; aim; as, to labor for private or public ends.
Losing her, the end of living lose.
--Dryden.When every man is his own end, all things will come to a bad end.
--Coleridge. -
That which is left; a remnant; a fragment; a scrap; as, odds and ends.
I clothe my naked villainy With old odd ends stolen out of holy writ, And seem a saint, when most I play the devil.
--Shak. -
(Carpet Manuf.) One of the yarns of the worsted warp in a Brussels carpet. An end.
On end; upright; erect; endways.
--Spenser-
To the end; continuously. [Obs.]
--Richardson.End bulb (Anat.), one of the bulblike bodies in which some sensory nerve fibers end in certain parts of the skin and mucous membranes; -- also called end corpuscles.
End fly, a bobfly.
End for end, one end for the other; in reversed order.
End man, the last man in a row; one of the two men at the extremities of a line of minstrels.
End on (Naut.), bow foremost.
End organ (Anat.), the structure in which a nerve fiber ends, either peripherally or centrally.
End plate (Anat.), one of the flat expansions in which motor nerve fibers terminate on muscular fibers.
End play (Mach.), movement endwise, or room for such movement.
End stone (Horol.), one of the two plates of a jewel in a timepiece; the part that limits the pivot's end play.
Ends of the earth, the remotest regions of the earth.
In the end, finally.
--Shak.On end, upright; erect.
To the end, in order.
--Bacon.To make both ends meet, to live within one's income.
--Fuller.To put an end to, to destroy.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Old English ende "end, conclusion, boundary, district, species, class," from Proto-Germanic *andja (cognates: Old Frisian enda, Old Dutch ende, Dutch einde, Old Norse endir "end;" Old High German enti "top, forehead, end," German Ende, Gothic andeis "end"), originally "the opposite side," from PIE *antjo "end, boundary," from root *ant- "opposite, in front of, before" (see ante).\nWorldly wealth he cared not for, desiring onely to make both ends meet. [Thomas Fuller, "The History of the Worthies of England," 1662]\nOriginal sense of "outermost part" is obsolete except in phrase ends of the earth. Sense of "destruction, death" was in Old English. Meaning "division or quarter of a town" was in Old English. The end "the last straw, the limit" (in a disparaging sense) is from 1929. The end-man in minstrel troupes was one of the two at the ends of the semicircle of performers, who told funny stories and cracked jokes with the middle-man. U.S. football end zone is from 1909 (end for "side of the field occupied by one team" is from 1851). The noun phrase end-run is attested from 1893 in U.S. football; extended to military tactics by 1940. End time in reference to the end of the world is from 1917. To end it all "commit suicide" is attested by 1911. Be-all and end-all is from Shakespeare ("Macbeth" I.vii.5).
Wiktionary
n. (rfc-sense) The final point of something in space or time. vb. (context ergative English) To finish, terminate.
WordNet
v. have an end, in a temporal, spatial, or quantitative sense; either spatial or metaphorical; "the bronchioles terminate in a capillary bed"; "Your rights stop where you infringe upon the rights of other"; "My property ends by the bushes"; "The symphony ends in a pianissimo" [syn: stop, finish, terminate, cease] [ant: begin]
bring to an end or halt; "She ended their friendship when she found out that he had once been convicted of a crime"; "The attack on Poland terminated the relatively peaceful period after WWI" [syn: terminate] [ant: begin, get down]
be the end of; be the last or concluding part of; "This sad scene ended the movie" [syn: terminate]
put an end to; "The terrible news ended our hopes that he had survived"
n. either extremity of something that has length; "the end of the pier"; "she knotted the end of the thread"; "they rode to the end of the line"
the point in time at which something ends; "the end of the year"; "the ending of warranty period" [syn: ending] [ant: beginning, middle]
the concluding parts of an event or occurrence; "the end was exciting"; "I had to miss the last of the movie" [syn: last, final stage]
the state of affairs that a plan is intended to achieve and that (when achieved) terminates behavior intended to achieve it; "the ends justify the means" [syn: goal]
a final part or section; "we have given it at the end of the section since it involves the calculus"; "Start at the beginning and go on until you come to the end" [ant: beginning, middle]
a final state; "he came to a bad end"; "the so-called glorious experiment came to an inglorious end" [syn: destruction, death]
the surface at either extremity of a three-dimensional object; "one end of the box was marked `This side up'"
(football) the person who plays at one end of the line of scrimmage; "the end managed to hold onto the pass"
one of two places from which people are communicating to each other; "the phone rang at the other end"; "both ends wrote at the same time"
a boundary marking the extremities of something; "the end of town"
the part you are expected to play; "he held up his end"
the last section of a communication; "in conclusion I want to say..." [syn: conclusion, close, closing, ending]
a piece of cloth that is left over after the rest has been used or sold [syn: remainder, remnant, oddment]
a position on the line of scrimmage; "no one wanted to play end"
Gazetteer
Wikipedia
End or Ending may refer to:
In topology, a branch of mathematics, the ends of a topological space are, roughly speaking, the connected components of the “ideal boundary” of the space. That is, each end represents a topologically distinct way to move to infinity within the space. Adding a point at each end yields a compactification of the original space, known as the end compactification.
End is a 1984 fiction film by Mahmoud Shoolizadeh; is a story about the children who live near the railways and their lives are full of ups and downs. This film displays the story of a small child who lives in south of Tehran during times of social problems. The film analyses an unjust and unfair society.
On offense, an end who lines up close to the other linemen is known as a tight end and is the only lineman who aside from blocking can run or catch passes. One who lines up some distance from the offensive line is known as a split end. In recent years and the proliferation of the forward pass, the generic term wide receiver has come to define both split ends and flankers (wide receivers who line up in split positions but behind the line of scrimmage). The terms “split end” and “flanker” are often ditched today for terms like "X" and "Z" receivers. Bill Carpenter was the first "Lonesome end."
On defense, there is a commonly used position called the defensive end. Its primary role is to rush the passer, as well as to stop offensive runs to the outer edges of the line of scrimmage (most often referred to as "containment"). However, as there are no rules regulating the formation of the defense, players at this position commonly take on and share multiple roles with other positions in different defensive schemes.
In category theory, an end of a functor S : C × C → X is a universal extranatural transformation from an object e of X to S.
More explicitly, this is a pair (e, ω), where e is an object of X and
$$\omega:e\ddot\to S$$
is an extranatural transformation such that for every extranatural transformation
$$\beta : x\ddot\to S$$
there exists a unique morphism
h : x → e
of X with
β = ω ∘ h
for every object a of C.
By abuse of language the object e is often called the end of the functor S (forgetting ω) and is written
e = ∫S(c, c)or just ∫S.
Characterization as limit: If X is complete, the end can be described as the equaliser in the diagram
$$\int_c S(c, c) \to \prod_{c \in C} S(c, c) \rightrightarrows \prod_{c \to c'} S(c, c'),$$
where the first morphism is induced by S(c, c) → S(c, cʹ) and the second morphism is induced by S(cʹ, cʹ) → S(c, cʹ).
In the mathematics of infinite graphs, an end of a graph represents, intuitively, a direction in which the graph extends to infinity. Ends may be formalized mathematically as equivalence classes of infinite paths, as havens describing strategies for pursuit-evasion games on the graph, or (in the case of locally finite graphs) as topological ends of topological spaces associated with the graph.
Ends of graphs may be used (via Cayley graphs) to define ends of finitely generated groups. Finitely generated infinite groups have one, two, or infinitely many ends, and the Stallings theorem about ends of groups provides a decomposition for groups with more than one end.
Usage examples of "end".
They may opine that I have been an abettor of treason, that I have attempted to circumvent the ends of justice, and that I may have impersonated you in order to render possible your escape.
I will not wear thy soul with words about my grief and sorrow: but it is to be told that I sat now in a perilous place, and yet I might not step down from it and abide in that land, for then it was a sure thing, that some of my foes would have laid hand on me and brought me to judgment for being but myself, and I should have ended miserably.
End, I will lead you over this green plain, and then go back home to mine hermitage, and abide there till ye come to me, or I die.
B-39 Peacemaker force has been tasked by SIOP with maintaining an XK-Pluto capability directed at ablating the ability of the Russians to activate Project Koschei, the dormant alien entity they captured from the Nazis at the end of the last war.
Weeden gave it to his companion after the end, as a mute clue to the abnormality which had occurred, or whether, as is more probable, Smith had it before, and added the underscoring himself from what he had managed to extract from his friend by shrewd guessing and adroit cross-questioning.
Pender then went on to describe life aboard the ship for all of the hands, pleading with the admiral to intercede and put an end to this tyranny.
And in those times it was well to have the strong arms and sharp blades of any fighters available, for the Lowlands to the north were all aboil and the border was all aflame from end to end.
Just where the bitumen ended and the grass began sat a small Aboriginal boy, I recognised him as belonging to a house around the corner from us!
The purpose of those killings could only have been to dupe whoever was on the receiving end of those subconscious television messages into believing that this Abraxas character is some sort of Lone Ranger, spreading good wherever he goes.
Five minutes later the Lackawanna, Captain Marchand, going at full speed, delivered her blow also at right angles on the port side, abreast the after end of the armored superstructure.
I They secured the end of the rope to one of the poles wedged like an anchor in the opening of the tunnel that led to the crystal cavern, and Craig abseiled down the rope to the water at the bottom of the shaft once more.
StregaSchloss on the end of a moth-eaten damask curtain was a bad idea, or maybe the sight of the Borgia money going to such an undeserving home had simply robbed the estate lawyer of the will to live, but miraculously his abseiling suicide attempt didnt kill him.
No angle is present as the ending ridge does not abut upon the curving ridge which envelopes it.
Here he reared a continuous rampart with a ditch in front of it, fair-sized forts, probably a dozen in number, built either close behind it or actually abutting on it, and a connecting road running from end to end.
The core is placed upon the end of the ridge abutting upon the inside of the loop, and so the imaginary line crosses no looping ridge, which is necessary.