enders

back-ender

A car accident in which one car hits the back of the car in front of it. I heard that a lot of people had back-enders during that snowstorm last week.

rear-ender

A minor car accident in which minimal damage is incurred, especially to the front and rear bumpers of the two cars involved. Michelle was a new driver so she was extremely upset when she had her first accident. Luckily, it was just a rear-ender, so there was no real damage to either car involved. I know a mechanic who specializes in providing affordable repairs for scrapes, scratches, and rear-enders. You need to start slowing down much sooner when you're coming up to a red light, or sooner or later you'll end up causing a rear-ender with the car ahead of you.
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

rear-ender

and back-ender
n. an automobile wreck where one car runs into the back of another. (see also fender-bender.) It wasn’t a bad accident, just a rear-ender. The rain caused a couple of “back-enders,” but there were no serious accidents.

back-ender

verb
See rear-ender
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
See also:
  • back-ender
  • backed up
  • come back and see us
  • be back on the rails
  • be/go back to square one
  • back
  • back at (something or some place)
  • back to square one
  • a while back
  • back door
References in periodicals archive
"There are many examples to prove that companies in this sector and of this size should not necessarily be subject to state involvement," Enders, a German, told reporters after briefing Parliament's economy committee.
Enders is a manager with a reputation for tackling problems in a direct style but vowed to pause to explore options in the top job he inherited from Louis Gallois.
Even critics who felt that Price doesn't convincingly build her world (there's no explanation of the Spore Wars or how the technology enables the Ender's brain to control those forced to rent out their bodies) admired Price's ability to keep the action--and the suspense--moving at a compelling pace.
Enders also said he saw China as its main future competitor.
Enders said: "The primary purpose [of reimbursable launch aid] has been to level the playing field with our big competitor." He went on to accuse Boeing of "hypocrisy" for raising objections to European government support for the A350 XWB, adding that the 787 had been "probably the most highly subsidised commercial airliner ever".
As Enders and DGA employees reviewed hours of digital footage, they made a discovery: One clip clearly showed the broker accidentally dropping the diamond.
At an aviation and environmental summit in Geneva earlier this year, Carson and Enders signed an agreement to work together on reducing the environmental impact of aviation.
The book's metabolic make-up (short on conceptual insight, long on the finely wrought nuance) actually reflects Ender's idea of memory, which holds that the power and beauty of it is never in the generic, but in the poignantly singular.
EADS co-Chief Executive Tom Enders said there was no need to scrap the freighter version of the Airbus A380 superjumbo even though it now only has one customer.
Enders also said that there will be demand for 500 cargo aircraft of that size in the next 20 years.
If it is assumed that the East End was characterized by a rich communal culture, a key question to ask would be to what degree Jewish East Enders were part of that culture, of that community.
BAGHDAD BULLETIN The Real Story of the War in Iraq--Reporting from Beyond the Green Zone By David Enders published by Pluto Press ISBN 0 7453 2465 7 price 15.00 [pounds sterling] hardback
Consider the perspective of David Enders, a brave American journalist who has been in Iraq most of the time since the invasion.
ENDERS: Dirty Den, ageing lothario who betrayed Angie with a string of conquests.
Jody Enders. Death by Drama and Other Medieval Urban Legends.