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tail end

尾端,尾声,尾部,尾巴

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the hinder or rear part of anything.
    • : the concluding or final part or section; tag end: the tail end of a lecture.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • What would later be called the Fairness Doctrine originated in 1949 at the tail end of a media reform movement whose initial goal — going back to the 1930s — was to carve out a noncommercial sector on the nation’s airwaves.

  • There were some slight differences at the tail end of the top 5 names for Washington dogs.

  • New analysis shows that this spike is probably just the tail end of an early bombardment, the one that grew the planets in the first place.

  • While consumer intent through search behavior has significantly improved reach at the very tail end of the journey — highlighting in-market buyers — a vast majority of the prospect pool remains upstream in the journey on the open web.

  • Considering his age, Harden probably is at the tail end of his prime.

  • Yet this, in the end, is a book from which one emerges sad, gloomy, disenchanted, at least if we agree to take it seriously.

  • In the end, the clarity that comes from moments of horror can help us recommit to deeper principles.

  • In the end, I find it never fails to modernize even the most dramatic things.

  • Kennedy: "Mankind must put an end to war — or war will put an end to mankind."

  • This reporter knocked at the Wilkins home on Tuesday morning but received neither an answer nor the business end of a shotgun.

  • I presume the twenty-five or thirty miles at this end is unhealthy, even for natives, but it surely need not be so.

  • On to Gaba Tepe just in time to see the opening, the climax and the end of the dreaded Turkish counter attack.

  • He wanted to tell her that if she called her father, it would mean the end of everything for them, but he withheld this.

  • Under the internal pressure his whiskers stood on end and his face grew red.

  • She stood, in her young purity, at one end of the chain of years, and Mrs. Chepstow—did she really stand at the other?