Advertisement
Advertisement
finito
[ fi-nee-toh ]
51³Ō¹Ļ History and Origins
Example Sentences
In this way, and in his embrace of non finito, or āunfinished,ā effects, he took care to include the viewer in the visual order he had established.
I was feeling it all: the pandemic, outrage over racial injustice, exhaustion, the world just generally feeling finito.
Pascalās non finito manner, with little brought to a conclusion, is not an unfortunate failure but a deliberate defiance of Cartesian system-building.
āCherries are the fruit. Pop 'em in, slide out the stone, masticate, swallow, finito. None of this...spatter and gore.ā
And in styleāhe drops it a few feet from the flag, and finally, FINALLY, this one is finito.
Advertisement
More About Finito
What doesĢż“ھ±²Ō¾±³Ł“ĒĢżmean?
Finito is an informal way to say āfinishedā or ādone.ā
Finito is an Italian word meaning āfinishedā that has been borrowed into English unchanged. In English, it is used to emphasize that something is finished, often when the person is glad itās over.
Example: This relationship is done, over, finitoāI donāt want to see you anymore!
Where doesĢż“ھ±²Ō¾±³Ł“ĒĢżcome from?
A lot of people think that finito is Spanish for āfinished,ā but in Spanish, finito means āfiniteā (as in the opposite of infinite). When we say finito in English, we are actually borrowing from Italian, which borrowed from Latin. Latin gave Italian the verb finire, meaning āto finish,ā and finito is its past participle (past tense form).
Instead of just saying done or finished, English speakers sometimes add a bit of flair and say finito. This is often to indicate that something is finally complete, especially when itās a good thing that itās finished, as in Finally my term paper is finito! or Iāll be really glad when this week is finito. Other times, the term is used to emphasize that something is permanently finished, often in a bad way, as in Your days at this company will be finito if you donāt start showing up on time.
Finito often gets paired with other words that mean āfinishedā in order to really drive home the point, as in This article is finished, done, complete, over, finito.
Did you know ... ?
How isĢż“ھ±²Ō¾±³Ł“ĒĢżused in real life?
Finito often gets used to talk about the end of something that has lasted a while, especially when there are strong feelings about it. Or just to be funny.
I'm done⦠finished⦠finito. Goodnight :)
ā sd.23 (@s_o_dagunduro)
Kind of sad that there will never be another star wars movie. Yep this is the end of the line. Finito. Franchise over.
ā barf (@ihatethisok)
Right thatās me done. Finished. Finito.
ā daleypowell (@daley_powell)
Ģż
Ģż
Try usingĢżfinito!
Is finito used correctly in the following sentence?
If we lose this playoff game, our season will be finito.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse