double-ended









double-ended


double-ended [duhb-uh l-en-did] ExamplesWord Origin adjective

  1. having the two ends alike.
  2. Nautical.
    1. operating equally well with either end as the bow, as a ferryboat.
    2. noting a vessel having a stern curved or pointed so as to resemble or suggest a bow.
  3. noting any of various vehicles, as certain streetcars, designed to be operated with either end serving as the front.

Origin of double-ended First recorded in 1870–75 Examples from the Web for double-ended Historical Examples of double-ended

  • All we could do in that double-ended boat was to sit still and hold tight.

    Swept Out to Sea

    W. Bertram Foster

  • This particular head is double-ended and carries two cutters c.

    Turning and Boring

    Franklin D. Jones

  • Speaking or writing is, therefore, everywhere a double-ended process.

    The Teacher

    George Herbert Palmer

  • The lights had changed: The double-ended candles had disappeared.

    The Poor Little Rich Girl

    Eleanor Gates

  • With the exception of the five in the aftermost compartment, they were “double-ended,” with the furnaces facing fore and aft.

    An Unsinkable Titanic

    John Bernard Walker

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