释义 |
end-to-end adjective / present participle—Examples:(of holidays) come to an end—almost everything has a start, but not many things have an end (idiom); don't start sth you can't handle—until death puts an end (idiom); one's whole life—with a grunting sound it stops (idiom); come to an end spontaneously (esp. of sound)—no vestige of a beginning, no prospect of an end—come to an end (of a meeting)—if revenge breeds revenge, will there ever be an end it? (Buddhist saying)—even if you build a thousand-league awning for it, every banquet must come an end [idiom.]—all good things must come an end [idiom.]—start talking to end an awkward silence or embarrassing situation—the whole course of an event from beginning end—lit. the path exhausted, the end of the road (idiom); an impasse—fig. try to gain an advantage only to end up worse off—I beg you partake of this sacrifice (used at the end of an elegiac address)—lit. an arrow at the end of its flight [idiom.]— |