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Wiktionary
windup

a. Operated by a coiled spring that is wound by hand. alt. 1 The act of ending or concluding something. 2 The last part of something; a conclusion. 3 (context British English) A practical joke or tease. 4 (context baseball English) The act of preparing for a certain style of pitching. n. 1 The act of ending or concluding something. 2 The last part of something; a conclusion. 3 (context British English) A practical joke or tease. 4 (context baseball English) The act of preparing for a certain style of pitching.

WordNet
windup
  1. adj. operated by a mechanism; "windup toys" [syn: windup(a)]

  2. n. a concluding action [syn: completion, culmination, closing, mop up]

Usage examples of "windup".

Ullmer glanced through the tangle of curly hair on his forearm at his old windup Breitling, the only kind of decoration he would allow his people in the secluded hangars and workshops near Elmira, New York, which NSA people called the Snake Pit.

Knowing that Minton would have been intimidated to silence by the judge, I decided to raise the rhetoric up a notch, go off notes and get directly to the windup.

The former day nursery, which Henry preferred to call his schoolroom, had a pair of desks and a bookcase in one corner, but playroom might have been a better term, for the rest of the long, lofty chamber was crowded with an assortment of expensive toys, including the latest mechanical windup trains and fire engines.

Now, as his doll-baby lashes commenced to flutter like those of a windup Jezebel.

He'd had to do it, and had also known afterward that the flight crew in question would go back to their quarters muttering about the dumb old fart on the flag bridge who didn't know what it was like to drive fighter planes, 'cause the Spads he'd grown up with had probably used windup keys to get off the boat….

With little left to pitch that he hadn't already tried, he again advanced with left fist, right fist, as windup for a right roundhouse kick.

The cars looked like little windups you might buy at the five and dime.

I have had a long history of trying watches, from simple ten dollar windups to sophisticated solar chronographs, and all had one thing in common: they ceased working after a year or so.