[
UK
/fˈaɪnaɪt/
]
[ US /ˈfaɪˌnaɪt/ ]
[ US /ˈfaɪˌnaɪt/ ]
ADJECTIVE
- (of verbs) relating to forms of the verb that are limited in time by a tense and (usually) show agreement with number and person
- bounded or limited in magnitude or spatial or temporal extent
How To Use finite In A Sentence
- And I think the resort is about 25% overpriced, considering the worn-down state of the place and the fact you can get a two-night package at the definitely more upmarket Avillion in Port Dickson (also not really PD, but a dozen kilometres south) from about RM800 as well. Vacations: Tiara Beach Resort — Fusion Despatches
- Back in our world, custom has perhaps staled Shakespeare's infinite variety a bit.
- It will definitely take a lot more tweaking to get me completely happy with it.
- The second version occurs as Corollary 2 to Proposition 7 and was thought of as a method of expanding solutions of fluxional equations in infinite series.
- These infinitesimal particles are usually grouped into four main categories: the mesons, the baryons, the leptons, and the photons (the most basic unit of electromagnetic radiation).
- Ten of his team are definitely travelling but there are doubts about the other two.
- But though this darkness were wholly removed, there is another darkness, that ariseth not from the want of light, but from the excessive superabundance of light — _caligo lucis nimiæ_, (240) that is, a divine darkness, a darkness of glory, such an infinite excess and superplus of light and glory, above all created capacities, that it dazzles and confounds all mortal or created understandings. The Works of the Rev. Hugh Binning
- He adds, a few lines further on, that this term freedom is an indefinite, and incalculably ambiguous term… liable to an infinity of misunderstandings, confusions and errors.
- You need infinite patience for this job.
- The human was definitely looking at her.