n. 结束;目标;尽头;末端;死亡
vi. 结束,终止;终结
vt. 结束,终止;终结
n. (End)人名;(英、德)恩德
英 [end] 美 [ɛnd]
权威例句
- The agreement has raised hopes that the war may end soon.
那项协议使人们感到战争有望很快结束。
来自柯林斯例句 - Rationing had put an end to a surfeit of biscuits long ago.
定量供应很久以前就结束了饼干过剩的状况。
来自柯林斯例句 - He had wandered to the far end of the room.
他转到屋子的那一头。
来自柯林斯例句 - Only two go down at the end of this season.
本赛季末只有两支队伍降级。
来自柯林斯例句 - For some people, competing is the be-all and end-all of their running.
对于有些人来说,赛跑的全部意义就是竞争。
来自柯林斯例句
中文词源
end 结尾
来自PIE*ant, 相反,相对,词源同前缀anti-. 即终端,分开点。
英文词源
end
**end: **[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 andeis, German ende, Dutch einde, Swedish ända, and English end.
end (n.)
Old English ende "end, conclusion, boundary, district, species, class," from Proto-Germanic *andja (cognates: Old Frisian enda, Old Dutch ende, Dutch einde, Old Norse endir "end;" Old High German enti "top, forehead, end," German Ende, Gothic andeis "end"), originally "the opposite side," from PIE *antjo "end, boundary," from root *ant- "opposite, in front of, before" (see ante).
Worldly wealth he cared not for, desiring onely to make both ends meet. [Thomas Fuller, "The History of the Worthies of England," 1662]
Original sense of "outermost part" is obsolete except in phrase ends of the earth. Sense of "destruction, death" was in Old English. Meaning "division or quarter of a town" was in Old English. The end "the last straw, the limit" (in a disparaging sense) is from 1929. The end-man in minstrel troupes was one of the two at the ends of the semicircle of performers, who told funny stories and cracked jokes with the middle-man. U.S. football end zone is from 1909 (end for "side of the field occupied by one team" is from 1851). The noun phrase end-run is attested from 1893 in U.S. football; extended to military tactics by 1940. End time in reference to the end of the world is from 1917. To end it all "commit suicide" is attested by 1911. Be-all and end-all is from Shakespeare ("Macbeth" I.vii.5).
end (v.)
Old English endian "to end, finish, abolish, destroy; come to an end, die," from the source of end (n.). Related: Ended; ending.