be-all and end-all, the
The most important element or purpose, as in Buying a house became the be-all and end-all for the newlyweds. Shakespeare used this idiom in Macbeth (1:6), where Macbeth muses that “this blow might be the be-all and the end-all” for his replacing Duncan as king. [Late 1500s]
Words nearby be-all and end-all, the
be the death of,
be the end of one,
be the making of,
be-,
be-all and end-all,
be-all and end-all, the,
bea,
beach,
beach aster,
beach ball,
beach berm