(astronomy) The point on the celestial sphere toward which the Sun appears to move relative to nearby stars.
(attributive, ecology) The top of the food chain.
(botany) The end of a leaf, petal or similar organ opposed to the end where it is attached to its support.
(botany) The growing point of a shoot.
(figuratively) The moment of greatest success, expansion, etc.
(geometry) The highest point in a plane or solid figure, relative to a base line or plane.
(mining, US) The end or edge of a vein nearest the surface.
(physics) The lowest point on a pendant drop of a liquid.
A conical priest cap.
A diacritic in Classical Latin that resembles and gave rise to the acute.
A diacritic in Middle Vietnamese that indicates /ŋ͡m/.
A sharp upward point formed by two strokes that meet at an acute angle, as in "W", uppercase "A", and closed-top "4", or by a tapered stroke, as in lowercase "t".
The deepest part of a tooth's root.
The highest or the greatest part of something, especially forming a point.
The lowest part of the human heart.
expo
expo
noun
An expediter; a restaurant worker who prepares food to be taken to tables.
An exposition.
expt
expy
expy
noun
(fandom slang) A character in a work of fiction who is a stand-in for or knockoff of a character from an unrelated work or of a real person.
Contraction of expressway.
oexp
plex
plex
noun
(Canada) A building, such as a duplex or triplex, with a number of apartments (typically two to four) that all open directly to the outside.
(computing) A designated portion of a disk, usually set up to mirror some of the contents.
Clipping of multiplex.
prex
prex
noun
(US, university slang) A president, especially of a university.
Prefix.
spex
spex
noun
(colloquial, plural only) Dated form of specs (“spectacles”).