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finality

[ US /faɪˈnæɫəti/ ]
[ UK /fa‍ɪnˈælɪti/ ]
NOUN
  1. the quality of being final or definitely settled
    the finality of death

How To Use finality In A Sentence

  • No," she said, a word abrupt and uncommon to her, putting the ka’athyra back on its shelf with finality. Dwellers in the Crucible
  • No doubt there will be many more changes in the future, for finality is not in the language of politics. The Changing Commonwealth
  • They address matters of fate, fatality and finality with yet more weight and wit.
  • She's a whirlwind of anger and violence, desperate to deny the finality of Rocky's affliction that she knew she would one day have to face.
  • Everything seemed so strange, so surreal almost, and yet with a definite air of finality.
  • the finality of death
  • There was a note of finality in his voice.
  • ‘Two gold denarii! ‘declared Charon with an air of finality.’
  • If they allow too long a period to go by before making a claim the national court may properly conclude that the principle of finality or legal certainty requires it to refuse to disapply the limitation provisions.
  • Peel no more meant to convey any idea of this kind than did Lord John Russell, when he used the word finality in connection with the Reform Act, mean to convey the idea that, according to his conviction, Parliament was never again to be invited to extend the electoral franchise or to modify the conditions under which the votes of the electors were to be given. A History of the Four Georges and of William IV, Volume IV (of 4)
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