Top 10 similar words or synonyms for ends

desolation    0.953106

trusts    0.947173

ccrp    0.944425

firearms    0.943504

valuation    0.942511

mckean    0.940397

челек    0.940346

witness    0.939720

sawatdi    0.938849

кол    0.938489

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for ends

Article Example
Mainchín Seoighe Sa bhliain 1941 fuair sé post státseirbhísigh i gComhairle Chontae Luimnigh, áit ar fhan sé ag obair go dtí go ndeachaigh sé ar pinsean breis is dhá scór bliain ina dhiaidh sin. Is mar cholúnaí, mar scríbhneoir agus mar iriseoir ócáidiúil is mó a chuaigh sé greamaithe i gcuimhne na ndaoine. Scríobhadh sé colún ar an "Limerick Leader" faoin teideal "Odds and Ends" ina gcardáladh sé gnéithe de stair áitiúil an cheantair, cosúil leis na focail Ghaeilge a mhair i gcanúint Bhéarla na háite nó leis na bailéid Bhéarla a bhí á gcanadh ag muintir an cheantair. Bhreacadh sé síos ábhar Gaeilge don "Leader" freisin, agus is é an t-ainm cleite a chleachtaíodh sé sna haistí seo ná "An Mangaire Súgach", mar chomhartha ómóis don tseanfhile Aindrias Mac Craith.
Bundúchasaigh na Tasmáine Sa chuid deiridh den bhliain 1831 thug George Augustus Robinson 51 Bundúchasach leis go dtí áit ar Oileán Flinders a dtugtaí The Lagoons uirthi. Tharla nach raibh sí oiriúnach toisc go raibh sí gan uisce agus rite le gaoth, agus nach raibh talamh insaothraithe ann. Mura bhfuair na Bundúchasaigh prátaí ó shealgairí agus teacht ar chánóga earrghearra a bheith acu bheidís marbh le hocras. Laistigh de roinnt míonna cailleadh duine is tríocha acu. They were lodged at night in shelters or "breakwinds." These "breakwinds" were thatched roofs sloping to the ground, with an opening at the top to let out the smoke, and closed at the ends, with the exception of a doorway. They were twenty feet long by ten feet wide. In each of these from twenty to thirty blacks were lodged ... To savages accustomed to sleep naked in the open air beneath the rudest shelter, the change to close and heated dwellings tended to make them susceptible, as they had never been in their wild state, to chills from atmospheric changes, and was only too well calculated to induce those severe pulmonary diseases which were destined to prove so fatal to them. The same may be said of the use of clothes ... At the settlement they were compelled to wear clothes, which they threw off when heated or when they found them troublesome, and when wetted by rain allowed them to dry on their bodies. In the case of Tasmanians, as with other wild tribes accustomed to go naked, the use of clothes had a most mischievous effect on their health.