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View synonyms for apex

apex

1

[ ey-peks ]

noun

, plural a·pex·es, a·pi·ces [ey, -p, uh, -seez, ap, -, uh, -].
  1. the tip, point, or vertex; summit.
  2. climax; peak; acme:

    His election to the presidency was the apex of his career.

  3. Astronomy. solar apex.


APEX

2

[ ey-peks ]

noun

  1. a type of international airfare offering reduced rates for extended stays that are booked in advance.

APEX

1

/ ˈeɪpɛks /

acronym for

  1. Advance Purchase Excursion: a reduced airline or long-distance rail fare that must be paid a specified number of days in advance
  2. (in Britain) Association of Professional, Executive, Clerical, and Computer Staff


apex

2

/ ˈeɪpɛks /

noun

  1. the highest point; vertex
  2. the pointed end or tip of something
  3. a pinnacle or high point, as of a career, etc
  4. Also calledsolar apex astronomy the point on the celestial sphere, lying in the constellation Hercules, towards which the sun appears to move at a velocity of 20 kilometres per second relative to the nearest stars

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Word History and Origins

Origin of apex1

Borrowed into English from Latin around 1595–1605

Origin of apex2

First recorded in 1970–75; A(dvance) P(urchase) Ex(cursion)

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Word History and Origins

Origin of apex1

C17: from Latin: point

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Example Sentences

In Colorado, proponents say reintroduction will create a healthy corridor for the apex predators between Canada and Mexico, and that wolves create a positive trophic cascade for ecosystems.

That cycle hit a new apex this week, when the New York Post published a report that raised numerous red flags suggesting a disinformation effort.

Bereaved widow Eve Harrington emerges from the shadowy alley in a rain-soaked trench coat, worms her way into stage actress Margo Channing’s inner-circle, then schemes and backstabs her way to the apex of the theater world.

Images of the interior show sunlight pouring through an oculus at its apex.

From Fortune

Both figures have fallen since the apex of pandemic lockdowns in May, but they remain above the peak of the Great Recession in 2009.

From Ozy

But the KKK actually reached its apex of influence during the 1920s.

He died at the apex, after one of the best rides of his life, in the oldest rodeo.

Its placing at the apex of British life is itself a little nuts, as the Ovation series shows.

The Gospel Tent at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, which opens today, is where Southern culture achieves an apex.

It allows us to see ourselves as the apex of history, the culmination of an inevitable, upward surge of improvement.

The upper wings are white, with a posterior broad black subtriangular border, having two or three white spots at the apex.

And, lastly, that at the apex of the nucleus the radicle of the future Embryo would constantly be found.

He considers the centre of the hilum as the base, and the chalaza, where it exists, as the natural apex of the seed.

The extreme apex is bifid, the lower process being rounded, the upper more pointed.

It is the crown and apex of all bad language, the coping-stone of all systems of verbal aggression and abuse.

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