different between endly vs upcome
endly
English
Etymology
From Middle English endly, endely (“final”), equivalent to end +? -ly. Compare Dutch eindelijk (“final”), German endlich (“final”), Middle High German endel?ch (“final”).
Adjective
endly (not comparable)
- (rare, now nonstandard) Final, terminal; of or pertaining to the end; conclusive.
- 1898, "Ludwig in London: Walkgo towards Tscerringross", by "Ludwig", in Punch, eds. Lemon, Mayhew, Taylor, Brooks, Burnand, Seaman, Volumes 114-115, page 65:
- I pull me up, he push, and endly am i [sic] on one Foot on the little Waggonstep.
- (in imitation of German)
- I pull me up, he push, and endly am i [sic] on one Foot on the little Waggonstep.
- 1972, Igbo market literature - Volume 2 - Page 238:
- The stretch of wilful obtuse to go in marriage leads a guiding knowledge of man in achieving an endly reach of it […]
- 1898, "Ludwig in London: Walkgo towards Tscerringross", by "Ludwig", in Punch, eds. Lemon, Mayhew, Taylor, Brooks, Burnand, Seaman, Volumes 114-115, page 65:
Derived terms
- unendly
Adverb
endly (not comparable)
- (rare, nonstandard) Finally; at last.
- 1998, Peter Sloot, Marian Bubak, Bob Hertzberger, High-performance computing and networking:
- This allows a more flexible resource utilization and better performance: any process can access its data wherever it is, a reduced migration cost can be obtained by the transfer of a minimal part of the process context (the data partially remaining where it is), endly the remote access cost is minimized thanks to the attraction between data and execution context.
- 1994, Zbigniew Ra?, Maria Zemankova, Methodologies for intelligent systems:
- Endly, some implementation aspects are presented.
- 1998, Peter Sloot, Marian Bubak, Bob Hertzberger, High-performance computing and networking:
Synonyms
- See also Thesaurus:lastly
Anagrams
- Edlyn, Lyden, Lynde
Middle English
Adjective
endly
- Alternative form of endely
Adverb
endly
- Alternative form of endely
endly From the web:
upcome
English
Etymology
From Middle English upcomen, from Old English ?pcuman (“to come up, arise”), from Proto-Germanic *upp (“up”), *kweman? (“to come”), equivalent to up- +? come. Cognate with West Frisian opkomme (“to arise, stand up”), Dutch opkomen (“to come up, ascend, occur”), German aufkommen (“to come up, arise, emerge”), Danish opkomme (“to arise, meet”), Icelandic uppkoma (“an outbreak, appearance, arising”).
Verb
upcome (third-person singular simple present upcomes, present participle upcoming, simple past upcame, past participle upcome)
- (rare, dialectal or obsolete) To ascend, rise; grow up; come up.
Noun
upcome (plural upcomes)
- (rare or dialectal) An ascent, climb; a way up.
- (dialectal, chiefly Scotland) An outward appearance, especially pertaining to the future; a promising aspect or outlook.
- (dialectal, chiefly Scotland) A comment, saying, expression.
- (dialectal, chiefly Scotland) The final or decisive point; result, outcome.
- (dialectal, chiefly Scotland) One's upbringing, development from childhood to adulthood.
Anagrams
- come up
upcome From the web:
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