terminate

English dictionary entry

Meanings

verb
  1. To end something, especially when left in an incomplete state.
  2. To conclude.
  3. To set or be a limit or boundary to.
  4. To form an appropriate end on (a wire, cable, hose, pipe, etc), such as by applying a cable terminal or a hose ferrule.
  5. To end the employment contract of an employee; to fire, lay off.
  6. To kill someone or something.
  7. To end, conclude, or cease; to come to an end.
  8. Of a mode of transport, to end its journey; or, of a railway line, to reach its terminus.
  9. To issue or result.
adj
  1. Terminated; limited; bounded; ended.
  2. Having a definite and clear limit or boundary; having a determinate size, shape or magnitude.
  3. Expressible in a finite number of terms; (of a decimal) not recurring or infinite.

Pronunciation

/ˈtɜːmɪneɪ̯t/ LL-Q1860 (eng)-Vealhurl-terminate.wav /ˈtɝmɪneɪ̯t/ LL-Q1860 (eng)-Naomi Persephone Amethyst (NaomiAmethyst)-terminate.wav /ˈtɝmɪnət/ /ˈtɜːmɪnət/

Word forms

terminate terminates terminating terminated more terminate most terminate

Etymology

From Middle English terminaten (“to bring to an end; to adjudicate; to end, stop; to border, confine, contain”) from terminat(e) (“bounded”, also used as the past participle of terminaten) + -en (verb-forming suffix), borrowed from Latin terminātus, perfect passive participle of terminō (“to set bounds to, bound, limit, end, close, terminate”) (see -ate (verb-forming suffix)), from terminus (“a bound, limit, end”) + -ō (verb-forming suffix); see term, terminus. Doublet of termine, cognate with French terminer.

This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.