cesar
cease ; terminate ; cashier ; let up.
After collection has ceased (because a point of diminishing returns appears to have been reached), the cards must be put into groups of 'like' terms.
At coffee yesterday Jeff Gordon had apprised her of the fact that three of his engineers had been summarily terminated.
His case was referred to the next session, and in the following May he was cashiered.
We can't let up on that just because these are tough times and he's had a very successful campaign.
cesar repentinamente
come to + an abrupt end
come to + a swift end
The demand for the old faces came to an abrupt end and the founders withdrew them from sale, some even destroying the old punches and matrices as so much scrap.
But these heady days came to a swift end with the stock market crash on Black Tuesday, October 29, 1929, in New York, Toronto, Montreal and other financial centres in the world.
hostilidades + cesar
hostilities + cease
Among other things, the war context gives the President the authority to detain enemy combatants at least until hostilities cease.
Julio César
Julius Caesar
Julius Caesar had the idea of founding a national or public library in Rome 'to open to the public the greatest possible libraries of Greek and Latin books'.
sin cesar
steadily
Rather readers grow by fits and starts now rushing ahead, now lying fallow, and now moving steadily on.