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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Pushing too hard is a fast route to overuse injuries and trail burnout, and neither one gets you to the terminus.—
Hanna Wickes,
Kansas City Star,
13 July 2026 The project will replace the existing alley between Kettner Boulevard and the train station at the western terminus of B Street.—
Jennifer Van Grove,
San Diego Union-Tribune,
8 July 2026 On its western terminus near Wayside Park and the Interstate 4 overpass, the Sanford River Walk connects with an existing trail into Volusia County.—
Martin E. Comas,
The Orlando Sentinel,
22 June 2026 The four-station extension will expand the Red Line south from its current terminus at 95th Street to 130th Street.—
Claire Murphy,
Chicago Tribune,
18 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for terminus
Word History
Etymology
Latin, boundary marker, limit — more at term entry 1