| a printed punctuation mark (‽), available only in some typefaces, designed to combine the question mark (?) and the exclamation point (!), indicating a mixture of query and interjection, as after a rhetorical question. |
| the offspring of a zebra and a donkey. |
end1 (ɛnd) ![]() | |
| —n | |
| 1. | the extremity of the length of something, such as a road, line, etc |
| 2. | the surface at either extremity of a three-dimensional object |
| 3. | the extreme extent, limit, or degree of something |
| 4. | the most distant place or time that can be imagined: the ends of the earth |
| 5. | the time at which something is concluded |
| 6. | a. the last section or part |
| b. (as modifier): the end office Related: final, terminal, ultimate | |
| 7. | a share or part: his end of the bargain |
| 8. | (often plural) a remnant or fragment (esp in the phrase odds and ends) |
| 9. | a final state, esp death; destruction |
| 10. | the purpose of an action or existence |
| 11. | sport either of the two defended areas of a playing field, rink, etc |
| 12. | bowls, curling a section of play from one side of the rink to the other |
| 13. | American football a player at the extremity of the playing line; wing |
| 14. | all ends up totally or completely |
| 15. | informal (US), (Canadian) a sticky end an unpleasant death |
| 16. | at a loose end, at loose ends without purpose or occupation |
| 17. | at an end exhausted or completed |
| 18. | at the end of the day See day |
| 19. | come to an end to become completed or exhausted |
| 20. | end on |
| a. with the end pointing towards one | |
| b. with the end adjacent to the end of another object | |
| 21. | informal go off the deep end to lose one's temper; react angrily |
| 22. | slang get one's end away to have sexual intercourse |
| 23. | in the end finally |
| 24. | keep one's end up |
| a. to sustain one's part in a joint enterprise | |
| b. to hold one's own in an argument, contest, etc | |
| 25. | make ends meet, make both ends meet to spend no more than the money one has |
| 26. | informal no end, no end of (intensifier): I had no end of work |
| 27. | on end |
| a. upright | |
| b. without pause or interruption | |
| 28. | informal the end |
| a. the worst, esp something that goes beyond the limits of endurance | |
| b. chiefly (US) the best in quality | |
| 29. | the end of the road the point beyond which survival or continuation is impossible |
| 30. | throw someone in at the deep end to put someone into a new situation, job, etc, without preparation or introduction |
| —vb | |
| 31. | to bring or come to a finish; conclude |
| 32. | to die or cause to die |
| 33. | (tr) to surpass; outdo: a novel to end all novels |
| 34. | informal end it all to commit suicide |
| Related: final, terminal, ultimate | |
| [Old English ende; related to Old Norse endir, Gothic andeis, Old High German endi, Latin antiae forelocks, Sanskrit antya last] | |
| 'ender1 | |
| —n | |
end1 (ɛnd) ![]() | |
| —n | |
| 1. | the extremity of the length of something, such as a road, line, etc |
| 2. | the surface at either extremity of a three-dimensional object |
| 3. | the extreme extent, limit, or degree of something |
| 4. | the most distant place or time that can be imagined: the ends of the earth |
| 5. | the time at which something is concluded |
| 6. | a. the last section or part |
| b. (as modifier): the end office Related: final, terminal, ultimate | |
| 7. | a share or part: his end of the bargain |
| 8. | (often plural) a remnant or fragment (esp in the phrase odds and ends) |
| 9. | a final state, esp death; destruction |
| 10. | the purpose of an action or existence |
| 11. | sport either of the two defended areas of a playing field, rink, etc |
| 12. | bowls, curling a section of play from one side of the rink to the other |
| 13. | American football a player at the extremity of the playing line; wing |
| 14. | all ends up totally or completely |
| 15. | informal (US), (Canadian) a sticky end an unpleasant death |
| 16. | at a loose end, at loose ends without purpose or occupation |
| 17. | at an end exhausted or completed |
| 18. | at the end of the day See day |
| 19. | come to an end to become completed or exhausted |
| 20. | end on |
| a. with the end pointing towards one | |
| b. with the end adjacent to the end of another object | |
| 21. | informal go off the deep end to lose one's temper; react angrily |
| 22. | slang get one's end away to have sexual intercourse |
| 23. | in the end finally |
| 24. | keep one's end up |
| a. to sustain one's part in a joint enterprise | |
| b. to hold one's own in an argument, contest, etc | |
| 25. | make ends meet, make both ends meet to spend no more than the money one has |
| 26. | informal no end, no end of (intensifier): I had no end of work |
| 27. | on end |
| a. upright | |
| b. without pause or interruption | |
| 28. | informal the end |
| a. the worst, esp something that goes beyond the limits of endurance | |
| b. chiefly (US) the best in quality | |
| 29. | the end of the road the point beyond which survival or continuation is impossible |
| 30. | throw someone in at the deep end to put someone into a new situation, job, etc, without preparation or introduction |
| —vb | |
| 31. | to bring or come to a finish; conclude |
| 32. | to die or cause to die |
| 33. | (tr) to surpass; outdo: a novel to end all novels |
| 34. | informal end it all to commit suicide |
| Related: final, terminal, ultimate | |
| [Old English ende; related to Old Norse endir, Gothic andeis, Old High German endi, Latin antiae forelocks, Sanskrit antya last] | |
| 'ender1 | |
| —n | |
"Worldly wealth he cared not for, desiring onely to make both ends meet." [1662]
in Heb. 13:7, is the rendering of the unusual Greek word _ekbasin_, meaning "outcome", i.e., death. It occurs only elsewhere in 1 Cor. 10:13, where it is rendered "escape."