the end

the end

1. A phrase traditionally used to conclude a story. Often capitalized. And the prince and princess lived happily ever after. The End
2. The concluding or terminal point of some event or situation. This is the end—we have you surrounded! Surrender now, and we'll spare your lives! The economy was so unstable that we thought it could be the end for our company.
3. The final period or moments of someone's life. This is the end for me, Tom. Tell my wife and kids that I love them! He fought that damned disease right until the very end.
4. The apocalypse; the end of the world. (Usually used in reference to the religious belief of a final judgment being enacted by God.) Repent, all ye sinners—the end is nigh! He urged his parish to live their lives according to the good book and confess their sins regularly, for the end could come at any time.
See also: end
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

the end

n. the final insult; too much; the last straw. When she poured her drink down my back, that was the end.
See also: end
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
See also:
  • (one's) best foot forward
  • best foot forward
  • white paper
  • beck and call
  • (as) sure as eggs (is eggs)
  • 57
  • and the rest
  • and how
  • and how!
  • a penny for them
References in periodicals archive
The CBE reported a decline in public sector deposits to EGP 56.641bn by the end of March 2019, compared to EGP 63.457bn by the end of December 2018.
G OPENING G AMBIT FIRST G LIMPSE HEAD G IRL THE MIDDLE OF THE NIG HT MIDDLE AG E THE EYE OF THE TIG ER THIRD DEG REE LAST LEG RIGHT WING FINAL FLING THE END OF SPRING
It increased by EUR 63.2 M (0.3%) against the end of 2010 (EUR 18.336 B).
Integrating the voice of the end consumer into your product innovation process will probably require changes to your development process.
AT the end of the bank examiner workflow, the examiner or analyst fills in the date to move the document into the ERMS, and at that point--and not until that point--a "make record" icon appears on the desktop.
At the end of December, the sublease vacancy rate returned to 3.3 percent, its lowest level in two years and one full percentage point lower than its high of 4.3 percent in the second quarter of 2002.
Ten rubles, a hemogoblin of 10, 10 penny nails are examples where the end user's knowledge and the data's context are needed to realize meaning or generate information.
Such a system not only removed any temptation to apply ethical consideration to any technology or the ends to which it might be put, it had the added value of being compatible with the liberal consensus theory of democratic practice described above.
Under one safe harbor, one month will be considered "soon after" the end of a peak period (for the annual-business-cycle test) or the dose of operations (for the seasonal-business test).
The subjects were tested using the same test questions at the beginning of training, at the end of training, and approximately one month after training.
* Closed-end lease--one in which, when the car is returned at the end of the lease the consumer can "walk away." The lessee is usually still responsible for excess mileage, wear and tear and disposition.
From Jesus' death Christians have learned that the end is a good place to start.
Like Diotima and Socrates, she sends her disciple off to seek the "good thing" (in Chicago, as it happens); unlike Diotima or Socrates, the witch is there to receive her disciple at the end of the quest and, in a final act of good faith, to switch skins with her.
With your right hand, center the wand beneath the end of the ponytail and where you want your knob--at the center of the back of your head or lower.
The End of Nature (*1) has become, prior to publication, one of the fall's big books principally on the expectation that it will argue that everything about the environment is horrifying beyond reprieve, a thought that packages well, and appeals to media bookers.