Supreme; highest in degree; utmost.
Being the only one remaining of its class.
Farthest of all from a given quality, character, or condition; most unlikely, or least preferable.
Lowest in rank or degree.
Most recent, latest, last so far.
Final, ultimate, coming after all others of its kind.
A tool for shaping or preserving the shape of shoes.
A load of some commodity with reference to its weight and commercial value.
Most recently.
after everything else; finally
The (one) immediately before the present.
Closest in the past, or closest but one if the closest was very recent; of days, sometimes thought to specifically refer to the instance closest to seven days (one week) ago, or the most recent instance before seven days (one week) ago.
To hold out, continue undefeated or entire.
To shape with a last; to fasten or fit to a last; to place smoothly on a last.
To endure, continue over time.
Primary; most important; first level in importance.
Chosen or assumed among a branch of possible values of a multi-valued function so that the function is single-valued.
The chief administrator of a school.
A diapason, a type of organ stop on a pipe organ.
The construction that gives shape and strength to a roof, generally a truss of timber or iron; or, loosely, the most important member of a piece of framing.
A dancer at the highest rank within a professional dance company, particularly a ballet company.
The primary participant in a crime.
The first two long feathers of a hawk's wing.
A security principal.
A legal person that authorizes another (the agent) to act on their behalf; or on whose behalf an agent or gestor in a negotiorum gestio acts.
The chief executive and chief academic officer of a university or college.
The money originally invested or loaned, on which basis interest and returns are calculated.
A partner or owner of a business.
One of the turrets or pinnacles of waxwork and tapers with which the posts and centre of a funeral hearse were formerly crowned