Noun
a place where something ends or is complete
the final point in a process
Source: WordNetParallel lines have a common end point at an infinite distance. Girard Desargues
According to USA Today, Chase was speaking to co-author Alan Sepinwall, who said: ‘When you said there was an end point, you don’t mean Tony at Holsten’s, you just meant, “I think I have two more years’ worth of stories left in me”.’ Source: Internet
And so this perverse obsession with calling out “problematic” individuals reaches its end point - a schoolyard game where the popular kids make the playground such a nasty place to play, that the more sensitive kids pack up and go home. Source: Internet
Although intuitive communicators may want you to jump to the end point, they may need more detail later to execute. Source: Internet
And then, for a short story I fix my eye on the end point and let the rest happen; for a novel I kind of wallow, and try to keep the process playful and not-a-chore and not close off too many possibilities. Source: Internet
As a consequence, competition creates inequality which has continued to drive the market-logic of equality at an end point by reproduce the achievement gap among diverse youth. Source: Internet