"Valley" or "hollow".
Usually no, but there are some exceptions, mostly in the names of some French towns.
Countries need an apostrophe at the end if you want to mean a possession of something. Example: Countries' flags
This coastal feature is called a spit. It forms as sediment is deposited by longshore drift and wave action along the down-drift end of a barrier island, creating a narrow, elongated landform extending into the sea.
The type of dead-end is called a "cul-de-sac" (French for bottom of the sack). The term is also used for closed anatomical passages found in humans and other organisms.
There are about 32.1 miles from one end of Calgary to the other end.
morecombe
Never heard of that one. Plenty end in '-be', because that is '-combe'.
Combe Force, a group of extreme sports athletes, disbanded in 2009 after completing their final expedition.
There are no such towns.
There are no English towns or cities ending in ~bail.
Roamstead
'Aber' - meaning 'between' - is usually at the beginning of a town's name, not at he end. ADDED: It's more Scots and Welsh than English.
If at end of someone's name at a movie's end titles, it means "American Cinema Editors."
Warwick
EghamOldham
Tavistock, Woodstock
Eastbourne