endly
Adjective

endly (not comparable)

  1. (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, [https://books.google.com/books?id=6ZgwAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA65&dq=I+pull+me+up,+he+push,+and+%27%27%27endly%27%27%27+am+i+on+one+Foot+on+the+little+Waggonstep.&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiHuqTL2PTWAhXHMSYKHfXMBPcQ6AEIKDAA#v=onepage&q=I%20pull%20me%20up%2C%20he%20push%2C%20and%20endly%20am%20i%20on%20one%20Foot%20on%20the%20little%20Waggonstep.&f=false page 65]:
      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 […]
Adverb

endly (not comparable)

  1. (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 Raś, Maria Zemankova, Methodologies for intelligent systems:
      Endly, some implementation aspects are presented.
Synonyms


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