Finished

来自Big Physics

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Middle English: from Old French feniss-, lengthened stem of fenir, from Latin finire, from finis ‘end’.


Ety img finished.png

etymonline

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finished (adj.)

c. 1300, "consummate, perfect in form or quality," past-participle adjective from finish (v.). From mid-14c. as "beautiful, attractive;" 1540s as "refined, choice, elegant;" 1560s as "minutely precise or exact." Meaning "thin in consistency" is from c. 1400. From 1580s as "brought to a conclusion." Of made things, "completed," 1833.