From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishend productˈend ˌproduct noun [countable usually singular] TIsomething that is produced by a particular process or activity → by-product a high-quality end product the end product of years of practice
Examples from the Corpus
end product• But unlike its predecessors, Midnight Club fails to blend individual brilliance into a quality end product.• The supervision of work on site is a key factor for ensuring a good quality end product as well as for monitoring progress.• Assimilation is always the end product.• Though he said it himself, Hans was a masterpiece of genetics - the end product of two centuries of breeding.• Humus: The end product of decomposed organic matter such as leaves.• We have been programmed from an early age to rush our activities and are only interested in the end product.• The F-15 jets were the end product of a research program that began in 1965.• The end product of such a course of evolution is an obligate parasite that is inextricably linked to a particular host.From Longman Business Dictionaryend-productˌend-ˈproduct (also end product) noun1[countable]MANUFACTURING the final thing produced in a manufacturing processchemicals that are processed to make fibers, detergents and other end-products2[countable usually singular] the final result of a series of actions or eventsThe end-product of our training was for us to become independent. → compare by-product