What is another word for from end to end?

Pronunciation: [fɹɒm ˈɛnd tʊ ˈɛnd] (IPA)

There are many synonyms for the phrase "from end to end", which means to encompass the entirety of something. These include "from one side to the other", "all the way through", "top to bottom", "over the entire length", "across the width", "from beginning to end", "throughout", and "from start to finish". Using these synonyms can help to add variety and interest to your writing, and can also help to clarify your meaning when discussing something that covers a large area or span. So next time you want to describe something that extends from end to end, consider using one of these alternatives to spice up your language.

What are the hypernyms for From end to end?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

What are the opposite words for from end to end?

Antonyms for the phrase "from end to end" can include "partially," "incomplete," "fragmentary," "limited," or "inadequate." These words suggest that something is not fully continuous, but rather broken up or lacking in some way. For example, a road may be only partially paved or a story may be incomplete if it ends abruptly without a resolution. In contrast, "from end to end" implies completeness and thoroughness, leaving no gaps or missing pieces. By understanding the opposite meanings of this phrase, one can more accurately express the level of completeness or continuity of a given object, task or story that has a defined beginning and end.

What are the antonyms for From end to end?

Famous quotes with From end to end

  • We sail within a vast sphere, ever drifting in uncertainty, driven from end to end.
    Blaise Pascal
  • Free! The word and the thought alone were worth fifty blankets. He was warm from end to end as he thought of the jolly world outside, waiting eagerly for him to make his triumphal entrance, ready to serve him and play up to him, anxious to help him and to keep him company, as it always had been in days of old before misfortune fell upon him.
    Kenneth Grahame
  • And so in City after City, street-barricades are piled, and truculent, more or less murderous insurrection begins; populace after populace rises, King after King capitulates or absconds; and from end to end of Europe Democracy has blazed up explosive, much higher, more irresistible and less resisted than ever before; testifying too sadly on what a bottomless volcano, or universal powder-mine of most inflammable mutinous chaotic elements, separated from us by a thin earth-rind, Society with all its arrangements and acquirements everywhere, in the present epoch, rests! The kind of persons who excite or give signal to such revolutions—students, young men of letters, advocates, editors, hot inexperienced enthusiasts, or fierce and justly bankrupt desperadoes, acting everywhere on the discontent of the millions and blowing it into flame,—might give rise to reflections as to the character of our epoch. Never till now did young men, and almost children, take such a command in human affairs.
    Thomas Carlyle
  • A few years after the Constitution was adopted Alexander Hamilton said to Josiah Quincy that he thought the Union might endure for thirty years. He feared the centrifugal force of the system. The danger, he said, would proceed from the States, not from the national government. But Hamilton seems not to have considered that the vital necessity which had always united the colonies from the first New England league against the Indians, and which, in his own time, forced the people of the country from the sands of a confederacy to the rock of union, would become stronger every year and inevitably develop and confirm a nation. Whatever the intention of the fathers in 1787 might have been, whether a league or confederacy or treaty, the conclusion of the children in 1860 might have been predicted. Plant a homogeneous people along the coast of a virgin continent. Let them gradually overspread it to the farther sea, speaking the same language, virtually of the same religious faith, inter- marrying, and cherishing common heroic traditions. Suppose them sweeping from end to end of their vast domain without passports, the physical perils of their increasing extent constantly modified by science, steam, and the telegraph, making Maine and Oregon neighbors, their trade enormous, their prosperity a miracle, their commonwealth of unsurpassed importance in the world, and you may theorize as you will, but you have supposed an imperial nation, which may indeed be a power of evil as well as of good, but which can no more recede into its original elements and local sources than its own Mississippi, pouring broad and resistless into the Gulf, can turn backward to the petty forest springs and rills whence it flows. 'No, no', murmurs the mighty river, 'when you can take the blue out of the sky, when you can steal heat from fire, when you can strip splendor from the morning, then, and not before, may you reclaim your separate drops in me'. 'Yes, yes, my river,' answers the Union, 'you speak for me. I am no more a child, but a man; no longer a confederacy, but a nation. I am no more Virginia, New York, Carolina, or Massachusetts, but the United States of America'.
    George William Curtis

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