Crossword clues for ends
ends
- Is discontinued
- Doesn't keep going
- Confining features
- Calls to a halt
- Book holders
- "To the ___ of the Earth"
- "I want my ___" Everlast
- "... in the two ___ of the mercy seat" (Ex. 25:18)
- Word with split or book
- Word with rear and book
- We hope they meet
- Ultimate purposes
- Tim Tebow targets
- Tie up loose ___
- They might be split or loose
- They might be loose or tight
- They may be offensive
- They can justify the means
- The financially savvy make them meet
- Some of the fastest football players
- Some bread slices
- Some big Giants
- Right and left
- Prow and stern, e.g
- Plays the last note
- Plays the coda
- Pencil points and erasers
- Odds' counterpart
- Odds companion
- Odds and --
- Odds and __ (miscellany)
- Möbius strip's lack
- Means' justification
- Means justifiers, perhaps
- Means justification, for some
- Make-meet middle
- Loose things not found in rings
- Loose __
- Loaf heels, really
- Loaf heels, essentially
- Loaf heels
- It's good to make them meet
- It's better when they meet
- Half a potpourri pair
- Green Day "Wake Me Up When September ___"
- Good things to have meet
- Furthermost limits
- Final bits
- Earth parts?
- Earth extremes
- Doesn't continue
- Do they justify the means?
- Desired outcomes
- Completes the coda
- Comes to a grinding halt
- Closes down
- Calls a halt
- Burnt barbecue pieces
- Budgeters make them meet
- Brings down the curtain
- Boundary lines
- A loop doesn't have any
- "Tight" or "loose" follower
- "Sometimes kids get murdered for the ___" Everlast
- Wurst pair
- Word with split or bitter
- Word with split and rear
- Word with loose or book
- Word with "rear" or "tight"
- Word after loose or split
- Where hairs may split
- Where hairs may be split
- What this puzzle does here
- What the Earth doesn't really have
- What most donuts don't have
- What hoops and rings lack
- What even a Springsteen show does
- What bagels are made without
- What an infinite loop lacks
- What a circle lacks
- Volumes A and Z, e.g
- Vanishing points
- Utmost boundaries
- Uneaten parts of loaves, sometimes
- Ultimate intentions
- Trimmer's targets
- Top and bottom, e.g
- Tight and wide players
- Tight and wide men
- Tight and split
- Tight ___ (NFL players who typically wear jersey numbers 80 to 89)
- Tie up some loose ___
- Things trimmed at a salon
- Things that are farthest from the center
- They're third from the center
- They're offensive and chase bombs
- They might be tight or loose
- They may justify the means
- They may be tight or right
- They may be split or loose
- They may be split on heads
- They may be poles apart
- They may be living or dead
- They may be dead
- They line up next to tackles
- They justify the means, in a saying
- They have the odds with them
- They catch bombs
- They can be tight
- They can be loose or split
- The two to a loaf
- The odds are with them
- Terminals, for bus routes
- Terminal parts
- Targets for Brett Favre
- Swift pass receivers
- Stops it
- Stops existing
- Sports receivers
- Split parts of unattended hair
- Split or loose items?
- Split ____
- Split ___ (problems for a hairstylist)
- Speedy linemen
- Sometimes hard to make them meet
- Some rushers, in football
- Some pigskin catchers
- Some offensive or defensive gridders
- Some Montana targets
- Some might be loose, others tight
- Some gridiron guys
- Some fast Giants
- Some fantasy football trades
- Some bologna slices
- Some are loose, some are tight
- Snaps, as a winning streak
- Signs off
- Short pieces of cloth
- Sausage's two
- Santa Monica and Chicago, for Route 66
- Runs no more
- Relatives of odds
- Reaches the finale
- Reaches a coda, say
- R and R in Rochester, e.g
- Prow and stern
- Potential pass receivers
- Positions that may be split
- Poles of a magnet, e.g
- Pencil tips
- Pass masters?
- Parts of bread often the last to be eaten
- Parts of a loaf
- Partner to odds
- Partner of "odds"
- Pair in a loaf
- Pair in a line
- On a magnet they're called poles
- Often-loose things
- Often-loose items
- Odds and ___ (various things)
- Odds and ___ (miscellaneous things)
- Odd's mates
- Nothing follows them
- Montana targets
- Means may justify them
- Means justifiers?
- Manages, as a bar
- Making ___ meet
- Make/meet connector
- Make-meet link
- Make ___ meet (live within one's means)
- Make ___ meet (get by)
- Make ___ meet (get by financially)
- Make ___ meet (barely scrape by financially)
- Machiavellian justification
- Lowers the curtain on
- Loose things
- Loaf tidbits
- Loaf extremities
- Left overs
- Least popular slices
- Last bits
- Kisses off
- Kingdom of ___ (Kantian concept)
- Justifications for means, sometimes?
- It's nice when they meet
- Is done
- Infinite loops don't have them
- Hoop's lack
- Hits 0:00
- Heels, really
- Heels or butts
- Heels on a pumpernickel
- Heels of loaves
- Heels of a loaf
- Have trouble making ___ meet (struggle financially)
- Have trouble making ___ meet
- Hair parts that might be split
- Gridiron targets
- Grid men
- Grand finales, for fireworks shows
- Good things to make meet
- Goes no longer
- Goes away, in a way
- Gets done with
- Gets discontinued
- Gertain Giants or Jets
- Furthest reaches
- Furthest points
- Furthermost parts
- Forbids any more of
- Finishes the finale
- Finishes (appropriately)
- Finish lines, e.g
- Finally stops
- Final word of a budgeting quip
- Final boundaries
- Extreme pair
- Extrema, e.g
- Everlast's '99 hit
- Everlast single off "Whitey Ford Sings the Blues"
- Elway targets
- Elusive parts of rainbows
- Earth parts, figuratively
- Don Hutson et al
- Doesn't last forever
- Difficult things to make meet
- December 31, the letter Z, etc
- Dead-___ (streets or alleys with no outlet)
- Dead ___ (roads with no outlet)
- Crusty pieces of a loaf of bread
- Crustiest parts of loaves
- Crustiest parts of a loaf
- Crustiest bread slices, generally
- Crispy brisket bits
- Counterpart of odds
- Companions of odds
- Colin Kaepernick targets
- Closes up shop
- Closes the book on
- Chewy bread parts
- Challah heels, e.g
- Certain gridiron positions
- Certain blockers
- Burnt barbecue bits
- Budgets make them meet
- Brings to a screeching halt
- Brings the curtain down on
- Brett Favre targets
- Bread slices
- Bread heels
- Bread crusts' positions
- Bow and stern, e.g
- Bombs are thrown to them
- Blows over
- All-American Rejects "It ___ Tonight"
- Airs the final episode
- Airs its final episode
- Aglets, for shoelaces
- Abates in court
- A ring doesn't have them
- A and Z, in the alphabet
- A and Z, for the alphabet
- "Wake Me Up When September ___"
- "Split" hair parts
- "Sometimes kids get murdered for the ___ ..." (Everlast)
- "Some people will rob their mother for the ___" Everlast
- "Please Don't Tell Me How the Story ___"
- "Pavement ___" (street sign)
- "Here's Where the Story ___"
- "Before we go any further I want my __" Everlast
- "Before we go any further I want my ___" (Everlast)
- " . . . that ___ well"
- '90 Sundays hit "Here's Where the Story ___"
- ''All's Well That ___ Well''
- candle at both ___
- Tight positions?
- Split_____
- Wraps up
- Linemen
- Concludes
- QB targets
- Remnants
- Upshots
- Pass receivers
- Tackles' neighbors
- They're sometimes loose
- What a ring lacks
- Extremities
- Goals of means
- Outcomes
- Parts to tie
- Quashes
- Some footballers
- Brings to a close
- Aims
- Machiavellian concerns
- Tips
- Volumes A and Z in an encyclopedia
- Cricket wickets
- Winds up or winds down
- Loaf pair
- They may be loose or split
- They may be split or tight
- Loose parts
- Bounds
- Doesn't go on forever
- Pulls the plug on
- Means justifiers, at times
- Intentions
- Epilogs
- Finales
- Means' justifiers?
- Loose ___
- Pass catchers
- Gridiron group
- Some scrimmagers
- Targets of men who make passes?
- Conclusions
- Puts a stop to
- They may come with odds
- Goes no further
- Runs out
- See 64-Across
- Completes the coda, e.g
- They can be tight or loose
- Purposes
- Breaks off
- Comes to a halt
- At loose ____
- Some receivers
- Partner of odds
- Certain linemen
- "Loose" things
- Termini
- Two slices of a loaf of bread
- Some sausage slices
- Loaf parts that you may eat last
- Periods, for many sentences
- Some try to make them meet
- Extremes
- Cuts off
- Leaves off
- Means justifiers, some say
- "Tight" ones
- Rings lack them
- It's sometimes hard to make them meet
- Stopping points
- Final stages
- Parts cut off
- Expires
- They may be tight or loose
- Peters out
- Football positions
- ___ of the earth
- Terminals or terminates
- There are two in a loaf
- Front and back
- What a ring doesn't have
- Some linemen
- Most-cooked parts of roasts
- What circles lack
- Line pair
- Outer limits
- To the ___ of the earth
- Far left and far right
- Reaches 0:00:00 on a countdown clock, say
- Discontinues
- Partner of 56-Down
- Closes out
- Two on a line
- Things rings lack
- Some blockers
- Finishes with
- Extrema, e.g.
- Means justifier, for some
- Terminates
- Gridiron positions
- Calls off
- Many rushers
- Make ___ meet (stay within one's budget)
- Doesn't carry on
- Puts the kibosh on
- Some touchdown scorers
- Some football linemen
- Objectives
- Draws to a close
- Leftovers
- Modern synonym for 5-Down
- Some are split
- These may be loose or tight
- They might meet in a bowl
- Word attached to book
- Results
- Rice and Irvin
- They're loose or tight
- Stops working
- Tight and split athletes
- Denouements
- Limits
- Football linemen
- Some are tight
- Rope parts
- Odds and ____
- Terminations
- Ceases
- Odds' companion
- Loose items, sometimes
- Some eligible receivers
- Boundaries
- Settles
- Eleven positions
- Things to make meet
- Partners of odds
- What to make meet
- Wide receivers
- Odds' partners
- They rarely meet
- Bow and stern, e.g.
- Some of Kosar's targets
- Football-pass catchers
- Targets of some bombs
- Brings to a conclusion
- Non-meeters, often
- Windups
- They may justify means
- Some pass receivers
- Destinies
- It's hard to make them meet
- It's a feat to make these meet
- Millay's candle had two
- Men to be headed off at the pass
- Oct. 31, Nov. 30, etc.
- Tag and loose
- Partner of means
- Tight or loose followers
- Dead and loose followers
- Items sometimes loose
- Book ___
- Word with book and week
- Football players
- Men on the line
- Divinity shapings
- Two of eleven
- Some can't make them meet
- Means justifications
- Haldeman's "The ___ of Power"
- Administers the coup de grâce
- Termination points
- What skimpers hope to make meet
- Means' partner
- Companion of odds
- Quits
- Finishes post from top to bottom
- Finishes dispatch with head down
- At last, first-rate Mason Greenwood scores goals
- Boundaries some defend successfully
- Black out from decompression sickness, which can result in deaths
- Desired results
- Tips? Tips from eastern diners
- Brings to a halt
- Theme of the puzzle
- Tackles' teammates
- 1999 Ron Howard film
- Knocks off
- Comes to a close
- Fizzles out
- Cuts short
- Email command
- They can be made to meet
- Odds partner
- Drops the curtain on
- Calls it a day
- Calls a halt to
- Finishes up
- They justify the means, it's said
- Split ___ (tonsorial woe, and a hint to this puzzle's theme)
- Justifiers of means
- Circle's lack
- Border lines
- A string has two
- Winds down
- They may be loose or tight
- Final parts
- Fades to black
- They may be bitter or defensive
- They justify the means?
- Stamps out
- Shuts down
- Puts to rest
- Odds' mates
- Comes to a stop
- "All's Well That ___ Well"
- They're far from the center
- Some NFLers
- Some gridiron players
- Some Giants
- Some football players
- Nips in the bud
- Loose things to tie up?
- Grinds to a halt
- Comes to a conclusion
- Calls it quits
- Budget meeting?
- Wraps things up
- Ultimate goals
- They're offensive and looking to score
- These might be split
- Split ___ (hair problems)
- Some NFL players
- Phases out
- NFL positions
- Make -- meet
- It's good when they meet
- Goes last
- Finishes off
- Airs the final episode of
- Unpopular slices
- Ultimate objectives
- Tom Brady targets
- They're well off-center
- Some pass catchers
- Reaches the coda
- Pulls the plug
- Last parts
- Is over
- Final chapters
- Draws the curtain on
- DeVotchKa "How It ___"
- Cuts it out
- Burn the candle at both ___ (work late)
- "Here's Where the Story ___" Sundays
- You hope they meet
- Word with rear or book
- Word with front or rear
- What rings lack
- What means may justify
- What even the longest show does
- What a Möbius strip lacks
- They're on lines
- They may be split, tight or loose
- They can be loose or tight
- These may be split
- Terminal points
- Sundays "Here's Where the Story ___"
- Some defensive linemen
- Reaches a conclusion
- QB's targets
- Puts to bed
- Pigskin receivers
- Make-meet connector
- Make ____ meet
Wiktionary
n. (plural of end English) vb. (en-third-person singular of: end)
Wikipedia
Ends is a collection of science fiction stories and poems by Gordon R. Dickson. It was first published by Baen Books in 1988 and as a companion volume to Dickson's Beginnings. Most of the stories originally appeared in the magazines Analog Science Fiction and Fact, Astounding, If, Galaxy Science Fiction, Destinies, Science Fiction Stories and Amazing Stories The poems first appeared in The Final Encyclopedia.
Usage examples of "ends".
Then he took from his bag the lantern, which he lit, and also two wax candles, which, when lighted, he stuck by melting their own ends, on other coffins, so that they might give light sufficient to work by.
I got a new hold of him as we staggered and plunged, roaring the while like the wild beasts we were, the teeth chattering in the Martian heads as they watched us, and then, exerting all my strength, lifted him fairly from his feet and with supreme effort swung him up, shoulder high, and with a mighty heave hurled him across the tables, flung that ambassador, whom no Martian dared look upon, crashing and sprawling through the gold and silver of the feast, whirled him round with such a splendid send that bench and trestle, tankards and flagons, chairs and cloths and candelabras all went down into thundering chaos with him, and the envoy only stayed when his sacred person came to harbour amongst the westral odds and ends, the soiled linen, and dirty platters of our wedding feast.
The iron, prepared previously in long thin rods, the ends of which were sharpened with the file, having been introduced into the largest hole of the drawplate, was drawn out by the beam which wound it round itself, to a length of twenty-five or thirty feet, then unrolled, and the same operation was performed successively through the holes of a less size.
Quenya phonology: When a word ends in a vowel and the next word begins in one, the former vowel may drop out.
To them chains were fastened, and at the ends of many of the chains were human skeletons.
I was endeavouring to gather the loose ends of many thoughts and memories which flitted elusively through my tired and overwrought brain.
As I examined the heterogeneous collection of odds and ends that is always to be found in the pocket-pouch of a Martian warrior my hand fell upon the emblazoned radium flash torch of the black dator.
Each branch ends in a set of strong jaws, which have been known to drag down and devour large and formidable beasts of prey.
The bandage was then knotted at the back of the head, and finally brought down again and the ends bound under the chin to prevent its slipping.
But for us twain and for these dead ones shall the end of ends be Life, or shall it be Death?
A gauzy veil was thrown round and about the head, and of its two ends one fell down across her left breast, which was outlined beneath it, and one, now broken, streamed away upon the air behind her.
When two suitable helves had been selected with great care and the ends of the hafts notched to prevent the hand from slipping, the axe-heads were fixed on them as firmly as possible, and the weapons immersed in a bucket of water for half an hour.
Still, I hope to be able to do some good in my time, and I intend to devote myself to two great ends -- namely, to the consolidation of the various clans which together make up the Zu-Vendi people, under one strong central government, and to the sapping of the power of the priesthood.
Arrived at the forest, Pencroft broke from the first tree two stout branches which he transformed into clubs, the ends of which Herbert rubbed smooth on a rock.
Ayrton and Pencroft were able to fasten the masts and spars by means of ropes, the ends of which were carried to the beach.