The basic meaning of the phrase "death ends a life but not a relationship" is rooted in the belief that "something" continues after death. Something transcends the plane of existence that we live in or on, and when a person dies, if there was a friendship or other emotional bond between that person and another, the relationship will continue for or with the person who remains after the first individual crosses over. Also, when the second person crosses over, the two individuals will be able to continue their relationship in some form on the other side of this reality. As just a single example, if a set of twins grows and maintains a loving, caring relationship throughout their lives, the death of one will not "erase" the feelings in the other. Further, when the second of the pair leaves the mortal plane, the two once again are able to renew and maintain some kind of "friendship" and "kinship" on another plane. The two are again "united" after some manner in this other existence, and can continue "socializing" in some way. Assumptions must be made for this to make sense, and the big one that stares in the face of the individual who is considering this is that there is another plane of existence outside the one we currently live in. It's a plane removed from this one, disconnected from any of the tangible and "real" markers or characteristics that we know and understand in this reality. Philosophical or religious beliefs must allow for that other plane of existence, and though it cannot be proved that there is "life after death" as we see it, it cannot be proved that there isn't some form of "consciousness" or "reality" outside this one we now live in.
The words are of Old English origin, the original for 'sundry' was 'syndrig' meaning separate and apart. In the 12th Century the phrase emerged meaning 'odds and ends'
Many Internet sources claim it says: “Death ends a life, but it does not end a relationship, which struggles on in the survivor’s mind toward some resolution which it may never find.”BUT if you read this article, "FACT-CHECKING AND THE FIVE STAGES OF JOURNALISTIC GRIEFBy Jack Limpert and posted DECEMBER 2, 2013, you will see the actual line is this:‘Death ends a life. But it does not end a relationship.'The sentence is a line at start of the play, “I Never Sang for My Father" by by Robert Anderson.Moral: Always look for the primary source before quoting it.
Lost in the fun house is a phrase meaning the person keeps getting turned around and running into dead ends. The phrase is based after the popular carnival attraction.
A prepositional phrase usually ends with a noun or pronoun, which is the object of the preposition.
A prepositional phrase begins with a preposition and ends with an object of a preposition.
I got the loose ends all "sewn up" --- Basically you put to rest all the pressing matters at hand.
Within a period of a melodic line, the antecedent phrase usually ends on a pitch other than the tonic and the consequent phrase usually ends on the tonic note.
A prepositional phrase is a group of words that begins with a preposition and usually ends with a noun or pronoun. It is used to show the relationship between the noun/pronoun and other words in a sentence. Examples include: "on the table," "in the car," "under the bed."
make ends meet to make enough money to pay all your bills I can barely make ends meet is a common phrase meaning i can pay my bills but i have no money left over for spend money
He ends up in no relationship...
No
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