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单词 loose end
释义

end /end/

noun
  1. The last point or portion
  2. Termination or close
  3. Death
  4. Consequence
  5. An object aimed at
  6. A fragment or odd piece
  7. Half a unit length of cloth
  8. A warp thread
  9. A waxed thread ending in a bristle (shoemaker's end)
  10. One of the two sides of a field, court, pitch, etc defended by a team, player, etc (sport)
  11. Part of a game played from one end (of the bowling green, archery-ground, etc)
  12. A player positioned at the extremity of the line of scrimmage (American football)
  13. The part of an undertaking for which one is responsible
  14. An outer district
  15. A region
  16. A cottage room (Scot)
transitive verb
  1. To bring to an end
  2. To destroy
intransitive verb
  1. To come to an end
  2. To cease
  3. To be at the end
ORIGIN: OE ende; cf Ger Ende, Dan ende, Gothic andeis; Sans anta

endˈed adjective

  1. Brought to an end
  2. Having ends

endˈing noun

  1. A termination
  2. A conclusion
  3. Death
  4. Extremity
  5. Something that is at the end
  6. The final syllable or portion of a word, esp an inflection (grammar)
adjective
  1. Concluding
  2. Finishing
  3. Completing
  4. Dying

endˈless adjective

  1. Having or seeming to have no end
  2. Returning upon itself
  3. Everlasting
  4. Incessant
  5. Objectless

endˈlessly adverb

endˈlessness noun

endˈlong (Scot endˈlang) adverb

  1. From end to end (archaic)
  2. Continuously (archaic)
  3. Straight on (archaic)
preposition (obsolete)

Along

adjective (rare)

Set on end

endˈmost adjective

Farthest

endˈways or endˈwise adverb

  1. On end
  2. With the end forward

endˈ-all noun

Something that ends everything (see also be-all and end-all under be)

endˈgame noun

  1. The final stage of a game of chess or certain other games
  2. A person's manner of playing the endgame

endˈgate noun (N American)

A tailboard

endless chain noun

A chain whose ends are joined

endless gearing, endless screw or endless worm noun

An arrangement for producing slow motion in machinery, consisting of a screw whose thread gears into a wheel with skew teeth

end man noun

The man at the end of a row of performers, etc

endˈnote noun

An explanatory note at the end of a chapter or volume

end-of-the-pier' adjective

Impudent, frivolous and bawdy (in the style of variety shows traditionally performed at seaside piers)

endˈ-onˈ adverb and adjective

In the direction in which the end points

end organ noun

A specialized sensory or motor structure at a nerve-end

endˈpaper noun

A paper at the beginning or end of a book, pasted to the binding and leaving an additional flyleaf

endˈplay transitive verb (bridge)

To place (an opponent) in a situation where no lead can be made which does not cost a trick (also noun)

endˈ-product noun

The final product of a series of operations

endˈ-reader noun

One who peeps at the end of a novel to see the outcome

end result noun

The final result or outcome

end run noun (US)

  1. In American football, an attempt to run wide of the end of a defensive line rather than try to break through it
  2. An act of circumventing a problem rather than confronting it

endˈship noun (obsolete)

A village

endˈ-stopped adjective (poetry)

Having a pause at the end of each line (of verse)

end use noun

The final use to which anything, esp a manufactured article, is put

endˈ-user noun

  1. The person, company, etc who will be the recipient of a product being sold
  2. (usu end-user certificate) in international trade, documentation naming the end-user of a product being sold, required eg in the exporting of arms

endˈzone noun (American football)

One of the areas at either end of the field of play into which the offensive team attempts to take the ball

all ends up

  1. Completely
  2. Convincingly

at a loose end or at loose ends

  1. With nothing to do
  2. In a state of uncertainty or confusion as to one's course of action

at an end

  1. Terminated
  2. Discontinued
  3. Exhausted

at one's wit's end see under wit1

at the end of one's tether see under tether

be the end of

To cause the death of (often an informal exaggeration)

end for end

With the position of the ends reversed

end it all

To commit suicide

end of story

See under story1

end up

  1. To arrive or find oneself eventually or finally
  2. To finish (with with or by)
  3. To become in the end

get hold of the wrong end of the stick

To misunderstand

get or have one's end away (slang)

To have sexual intercourse

in the end

  1. After all
  2. At last

keep one's end up

  1. To maintain one's part, position, appearance, etc
  2. To be content to keep one's wicket standing without trying to score (cricket)

loose end

(often in pl) an unfinished, unsettled or unexplained matter

make (both) ends meet

To live within one's income (both ends meaning both ends of the year)

no end (informal)

Very much

no end of (informal)

A great deal of

on end

  1. Erect
  2. At a stretch

the end

  1. The last straw
  2. The limit

the end of the road (or line)

The point beyond which one can no longer continue or survive

loose /loos/

adjective
  1. Slack
  2. Free
  3. Unbound
  4. Not confined
  5. Not compact
  6. Unattached
  7. Untied
  8. Not close-fitting
  9. Not tight
  10. Relaxed
  11. (of the joints) freely mobile
  12. (of the bowels) affected by diarrhoea
  13. (of a cough) producing phlegm easily
  14. Inexact
  15. Indefinite
  16. Vague
  17. Not strict
  18. Unrestrained
  19. Lax
  20. Licentious
  21. Inattentive
  22. Dispersedly or openly disposed
  23. Not serried
  24. (of the ball) not in the possession of any player (football)
  25. Denoting all play except for the set scrums and line-outs (rugby)
adverb

Loosely

noun
  1. Loose play (rugby)
  2. An act or mode of loosing, esp an arrow (archaic)
  3. The loose state (archaic)
  4. Unrestraint (archaic)
  5. Freedom (archaic)
  6. Abandonment (archaic)
  7. An outbreak of self-indulgence
  8. A course or rush (obsolete)
  9. Event, upshot, end, as in at the very loose (Shakespeare)
transitive verb
  1. To make loose
  2. To set free
  3. To unfasten
  4. To untie
  5. To disconnect
  6. To relax
  7. To slacken
  8. To discharge
  9. To solve (Spenser)
intransitive verb
  1. To shoot
  2. To weigh anchor (archaic)
ORIGIN: ON lauss; OE lēas; see less

looseˈly adverb

loosˈen transitive verb

  1. To make loose
  2. To relax
  3. To make less dense
  4. To open or relieve (the bowels)
intransitive verb
  1. To become loose
  2. To become less tight

loosˈener noun

A laxative

looseˈness noun

  1. The state of being loose
  2. Diarrhoea

looseˈ-bodˈied adjective

  1. Of clothes, flowing, loose-fitting
  2. Loose in behaviour

loose box noun

A part of a stable where horses are kept untied

loose cannon noun (figurative)

Something or someone dangerously uncontrolled, like a cannon that may discharge unpredictably and cause damage to one's own side

loose change noun

Coins kept about one's person for small expenditures

loose cover noun

A detachable cover, eg for an armchair

looseˈ-cut noun

A disease of cereal crops caused by a parasitic fungus, Ustilago nuda, that reduces the grains to powder

loose end noun

Something that has been left unfinished or that has not been explained or decided

loose fish noun

  1. A person of irregular, esp lax, habits
  2. A prostitute

loose forward noun

  1. In Rugby Union, either of the two wing forwards or the number 8 at the back of the scrum
  2. In Rugby League, the player at the back of the scrum

loose-head prop noun (rugby)

The prop forward on the left of the front row in the scrum

loose housing noun

A means of housing cattle whereby the animals have access to shelter but are free to move about in straw-covered yards

loose-knitˈ or loosely-knitˈ adjective

(of communities, etc) not bound together by close ties

looseˈ-leaf adjective

Of a folder, binder, etc, having a cover designed so as to allow leaves to be inserted or removed

looseˈ-limbedˈ or looseˈ-jointˈed adjective

Having supple limbs

be at a loose end

To have nothing to do

break loose

To escape from confinement

give a loose to

To give rein or free vent to

let loose

To set at liberty

loosen up

  1. To become less shy or taciturn
  2. To exercise gently, eg in preparation for athletic effort

on the loose

  1. Indulging in a bout of unrestraint
  2. Freed from confinement

stay loose (informal)

Keep cool, keep relaxed

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更新时间:2025/1/22 10:56:01