Bring+to+completion
81fulfill — [v] bring to completion accomplish, achieve, answer, be just the ticket*, carry out, comply with, conclude, conform, discharge, do, effect, effectuate, execute, fill, fill the bill*, finish, hit the bull’s eye*, implement, keep, make it*, make… …
82carry through — ► carry through bring to completion. Main Entry: ↑carry …
83consummate — ► VERB 1) make (a marriage or relationship) complete by having sexual intercourse. 2) complete (a transaction). ► ADJECTIVE ▪ showing great skill and flair. DERIVATIVES consummately adverb consummation noun consummator noun …
84consummately — consummate ► VERB 1) make (a marriage or relationship) complete by having sexual intercourse. 2) complete (a transaction). ► ADJECTIVE ▪ showing great skill and flair. DERIVATIVES consummately adverb consummation noun consummator noun …
85consummation — consummate ► VERB 1) make (a marriage or relationship) complete by having sexual intercourse. 2) complete (a transaction). ► ADJECTIVE ▪ showing great skill and flair. DERIVATIVES consummately adverb consummation noun consummator noun …
86consummator — consummate ► VERB 1) make (a marriage or relationship) complete by having sexual intercourse. 2) complete (a transaction). ► ADJECTIVE ▪ showing great skill and flair. DERIVATIVES consummately adverb consummation noun consummator noun …
87perfect — ► ADJECTIVE 1) having all the required elements, qualities, or characteristics. 2) free from any flaw; faultless. 3) complete; absolute: it made perfect sense. 4) Grammar (of a tense) denoting a completed action or a state or habitual action… …
88perfecter — perfect ► ADJECTIVE 1) having all the required elements, qualities, or characteristics. 2) free from any flaw; faultless. 3) complete; absolute: it made perfect sense. 4) Grammar (of a tense) denoting a completed action or a state or habitual… …
89perfectible — perfect ► ADJECTIVE 1) having all the required elements, qualities, or characteristics. 2) free from any flaw; faultless. 3) complete; absolute: it made perfect sense. 4) Grammar (of a tense) denoting a completed action or a state or habitual… …
90exact — [15] The adjective exact ‘precise’ and the verb exact ‘demand with severity’ have undergone considerable semantic divergence over the centuries, but they both go back to the same source, the Latin verb exigere (from which English also got essay,… …