finite

[ fahy-nahyt ]
/ ˈfaɪ naɪt /

adjective

having bounds or limits; not infinite; measurable.
Mathematics.
  1. (of a set of elements) capable of being completely counted.
  2. not infinite or infinitesimal.
  3. not zero.
subject to limitations or conditions, as of space, time, circumstances, or the laws of nature: man's finite existence on earth.

noun

something that is finite.

Origin of finite

1375–1425; late Middle English < Latin fīnītus, past participle of fīnīre to stop, limit. See fine1, -ite2

SYNONYMS FOR finite

1 bounded, limited, circumscribed, restricted.

OTHER WORDS FROM finite

Example sentences from the Web for finite

British Dictionary definitions for finite

finite
/ (ˈfaɪnaɪt) /

adjective

bounded in magnitude or spatial or temporal extent a finite difference
maths logic having a number of elements that is a natural number; able to be counted using the natural numbers less than some natural number Compare denumerable, infinite (def. 4)
  1. limited or restricted in naturehuman existence is finite
  2. (as noun)the finite
denoting any form or occurrence of a verb inflected for grammatical features such as person, number, and tense

Derived forms of finite

finitely, adverb finiteness, noun

Word Origin for finite

C15: from Latin fīnītus limited, from fīnīre to limit, end

Scientific definitions for finite

finite
[ fīnīt′ ]

Relating to a set that cannot be put into a one-to-one correspondence with any proper subset of its own members.
Relating to or being a numerical quantity describing the size of such a set.
Being a member of the set of real or complex numbers.
Being a quantity that is non-zero and not infinite.