ends
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ends — 1. n. money. (Streets.) □ You got enough ends to get you through the week? □ We don’t have enough ends to pay the gas bill. 2. n. shoes. □ You even got holes in your ends. □ … Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions
ends — cal·ends; ends; week·ends; … English syllables
Ends — Infobox Book name = Ends title orig = translator = image caption = Cover of the first edition author = Gordon R. Dickson illustrator = cover artist = country = United States language = English series = genre = Science fiction short stories and… … Wikipedia
Ends — This name is of Anglo Saxon origin and is topographical for one resident at the end of a settlement of a street. The derivation is from the Old English pre 7th Century ende , (Middle High German ende , from the Old High German enti ). Early… … Surnames reference
ends — n pl American money. The term, probably originating in black street argot in the 1950s, was later adopted by college students. It may have begun as N s , referring to (bank)notes, or possibly derived from the cliche to make ends meet . It is also … Contemporary slang
ends — Jamaican Slang Glossary A place. Mi a go pon one ends still. (I am going to one place) … English dialects glossary
ends — n Money. I really would like to go to the shore this weekend but I just don t have the ends. 1990s … Historical dictionary of American slang
Ends — Money. I got no ends until Monday … Dictionary of american slang
Ends — Money. I got no ends until Monday … Dictionary of american slang
ENDS — comp. abbr. Ends Segment … United dictionary of abbreviations and acronyms