end
71end — I. n. 1. Extremity, extreme point. 2. Close, cessation, period, expiration, finale, finis, last, fall of the curtain. 3. Conclusion, completion. 4. Termination, bound, limit. 5. Final state, ultimate condition. 6. Result, event, consequence,… …
72end in — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms end in : present tense I/you/we/they end in he/she/it ends in present participle ending in past tense ended in past participle ended in 1) end in something to have something as a final result His attempt to… …
73end up — phrasal verb [intransitive] Word forms end up : present tense I/you/we/they end up he/she/it ends up present participle ending up past tense ended up past participle ended up mainly spoken to be in a particular place or state after doing… …
74end — Pau ana, panina, hope. ♦ To end, ho opau, ho ōki. Also: nuku, wēlau, ēlau, welelau, welewelelau, kīkīpani; kiko (as of a fish pole); po o (as of a cane, rope, or pole); wāwae (as of a rainbow); puku (rare). See pīpī2. ♦ At an end, muku …
75END — Contrôle non destructif Pour les articles homonymes, voir CND. Le Contrôle Non Destructif (C.N.D.) est un ensemble de méthodes qui permettent de caractériser l état d intégrité de structures ou de matériaux, sans les dégrader, soit au cours de la …
76End — Contrôle non destructif Pour les articles homonymes, voir CND. Le Contrôle Non Destructif (C.N.D.) est un ensemble de méthodes qui permettent de caractériser l état d intégrité de structures ou de matériaux, sans les dégrader, soit au cours de la …
77End — This name is of Anglo Saxon origin and is topographical for one resident at the end of a settlement of a street. The derivation is from the Old English pre 7th Century ende , (Middle High German ende , from the Old High German enti ). Early… …
78end — [OE] End is an ancient word, that has been traced back to an Indo European *antjó. This also produced Sanskrit ántas ‘end’, as well as Latin ante ‘before’ and Greek anti ‘opposite’. Its Germanic descendant was *andja, from which came Gothic… …
79end up — 1) PHRASAL VERB If someone or something ends up somewhere, they eventually arrive there, usually by accident. [V P prep/adv] The result was that the engine ended up at the bottom of the canal... [V P prep/adv] She fled with her children, moving… …
80end — [OE] End is an ancient word, that has been traced back to an Indo European *antjó. This also produced Sanskrit ántas ‘end’, as well as Latin ante ‘before’ and Greek anti ‘opposite’. Its Germanic descendant was *andja, from which came Gothic… …