galotne

Etymology
From. This word was first used in the grammatical sense of “ending” by and was soon accepted into the standard language.

Noun

 * 1)  top of the foliage, highest branches; thin, growing end of a trunk, branch, stem or root; highest part
 * 2)  top, summit, apex, highest part
 * 3)  apex, farthest extremity
 * 4)  final stage, end part (of a match)
 * 5)  ending the part at the end of a word that changes when it is conjugated, declined, etc.; the final, inflectional suffix of an inflected word
 * 1)  top, summit, apex, highest part
 * 2)  apex, farthest extremity
 * 3)  final stage, end part (of a match)
 * 4)  ending the part at the end of a word that changes when it is conjugated, declined, etc.; the final, inflectional suffix of an inflected word
 * 1)  apex, farthest extremity
 * 2)  final stage, end part (of a match)
 * 3)  ending the part at the end of a word that changes when it is conjugated, declined, etc.; the final, inflectional suffix of an inflected word
 * 1)  final stage, end part (of a match)
 * 2)  ending the part at the end of a word that changes when it is conjugated, declined, etc.; the final, inflectional suffix of an inflected word
 * 1)  final stage, end part (of a match)
 * 2)  ending the part at the end of a word that changes when it is conjugated, declined, etc.; the final, inflectional suffix of an inflected word
 * 1)  ending the part at the end of a word that changes when it is conjugated, declined, etc.; the final, inflectional suffix of an inflected word