final: [14] Of all the English descendants of Latin finis ‘final moment, end’ or ‘limit’ (see FINANCE, FINE, and FINISH), final, which comes via Old French final from Latin finālis ‘last’, preserves most closely the meaning of its source. But although by classical times finis denoted a temporal conclusion, its original use was for a physical boundary, and it appears to be related to figere ‘fix’ (source of English fix) – as if its underlying meaning were ‘fixed mark’. => finance, fine, finish
final (adj.)
early 14c., from Old French final "final, last," and directly from Late Latin finalis "of or pertaining to an end, concluding, final," from finis "end" (see finish (v.)). As a noun, late 14c., "that which comes last;" meaning "final contest" in a sporting sense is from 1880. As a shortening of final examination, from 1880.
雙語例句
1. Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.--Winston Churchill
成功不是終點,失敗也並非末日,最重要的是繼續前進的勇氣。
來自金山詞霸 每日一句
2. The winner of each preliminary goes through to the final.
每場初賽的獲勝者進入決賽。
來自柯林斯例句
3. The final word will still come from the Secretary of State.
最後仍然要由國務卿來定奪。
來自柯林斯例句
4. Kenya's Robert Kibe was the fastest qualifier for the 800 metres final.
肯尼亞的羅伯特·基布是800米決賽入圍者中速度最快的選手.
來自柯林斯例句
5. The sides must battle again for a quarter-final place on December 16.