Entertainment / Football / Tight End (TE): A player position on offense, often known as Y receiver, lines up on the line of scrimmage, next to the offensive tackle. Tight ends are used as blockers during running plays, and either run a route or stay in to block during passing plays.
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End Adjective Synonyms: extremity, extreme, extent, bound, boundary, tip, limit, terminus
End Verb Synonyms: kill, put to death, annihilate, exterminate, terminate, extinguish, destroy, ruin
End Noun Synonyms: close, termination, conclusion, cessation, expiration, finish, completion, finale, ending, wind-up, denouement or d‚nouement
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Tight Adjective Synonyms: stingy, niggardly, mean, penurious, miserly, parsimonious, penny-pinching, tight-fisted, close-fisted, mingy
Tight Noun Synonyms: secure, firm, fast, fixed, secured, close-fitting, snug, sealed, hermetically sealed, leak-proof, hermetic, impervious, impenetrable, impermeable, airtight, watertight, waterproof,
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Science / Periodic Table of Elements / Mendelevium (Md): Atomic number: 101, Atomic mass: (258) g.mol -1, Electronegativity: unknown, Density: unknown, Melting point: unknown, Boiling point: unknown, Vanderwaals radius: unknown, Ionic radius: unknown, Isoto MORE
Science / Genetics / Mendelian Inheritance: One method in which genetic traits are passed from parents to offspring. Named for gregor mendel, who first studied and recognized the existence of genes and this method of inheritance. MORE
Health / Herbs / Meadowsweet (Filipendula ulmaria): Intestinal Astringent, anti-inflammatory, carminative, antacid, anti-emetic. Protects and soothe the mucous membranes of the digestive tract, reducing nausea. It is gentle enough yet its astringency i MORE
Health / Yoga / Matsyendrasana : A spine twisting pose MORE
Entertainment / Literature / Masculine Ending - Masculine Rhyme: Rhymes that end with a heavy stress on the last syllable in each rhyming word. See under discussion of meter. MORE
Entertainment / Literature / Mendicant Orders: Orders of wandering monks who lived by begging. In the Middle Ages, the clergy was divided into secular clergy and regular clergy. The secular (i.e., 'worldly') clergy dealt with secular concerns such MORE