This word comes straight from Latin. In the Roman empire, a terminus was a boundary stone, and all boundary stones had a minor god associated with them, whose name was Terminus. Terminus was a kind of keeper of the peace, since wherever there was a terminus there could be no arguments about where your property ended and your neighbor's property began. So Terminus even had his own festival, the Terminalia, when images of the god were draped with flower garlands. Today the word shows up in all kinds of places, including in the name of numerous hotels worldwide built near a city's railway terminus.
Examples of terminus in a Sentence
Stockholm is the terminus for the southbound train.
Geologists took samples from the terminus of the glacier.
the terminus of the DNA strand
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Our Western inheritance, then: the concept of the deep underground as wasteland, dump, terminus of the unredeemable.—Literary Hub, 11 June 2025 This was to be a way station, not a terminus; after disembarking there, immigrants would be encouraged to fan out, helping to establish Jewish communities throughout the southwestern half of the nation.—Kathryn Schulz, New Yorker, 28 Apr. 2025 Costa Verde is at the terminus of the UC San Diego Blue Line, where an elevated platform also connects to Westfield UTC on the east side of Genesee Avenue.—Jennifer Van Grove, San Diego Union-Tribune, 29 May 2025 The most complex of those interchanges is at the highway’s southern terminus at I-84, situated west of McDermott Road, just shy of the Nampa border.—Rose Evans, Idaho Statesman, 28 Apr. 2025 See All Example Sentences for terminus
Word History
Etymology
Latin, boundary marker, limit — more at term entry 1
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