endling

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English[edit]

English Wikipedia has an article on:
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Etymology[edit]

end +‎ -ling, suggested in a 1996 issue of the magazine Nature.[1]

Pronunciation[edit]

Noun[edit]

endling (plural endlings)

  1. (rare) The last individual of its species or subspecies, which therefore becomes extinct upon its death.
    • 2002, SEJ Journal:
      The last known survivor, the endling of its species, is now stuffed and mounted in a museum in the remote, dusty city of Nukus.
    • 2012 June 27, Helen Lewis, “Sense of an endling”, in New Statesman[2], archived from the original on 2012-07-11:
      Endlings are also recorded for the quagga, an equine with zebra-like stripes on its front half, which died in 1883 in a zoo in Amsterdam; a Caspian tiger killed in the 1950s in Uzbekistan; and whichever of a pair of great auks killed in 1844 off the coast of Iceland died second.
    • 2017, B. J. Hollars, Flock Together: A Love Affair with Extinct Birds, page 106:
      It feels as if I'm the last one left—a human endling—the world turned silent beneath my boots.

Translations[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Robert M. Webster, Bruce Erickson (1996 April) “The last word?”, in Nature[1], volume 380, number 6573, →DOI, →ISSN, pages 386–386:We therefore propose that ‘endling’ be adopted to designate a person or one of a species that is the last of a lineage in his/her/its line.

Anagrams[edit]