definitive
See also: définitive
English
Etymology
From Middle French définitif
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /dɪˈfɪn.ɪt.ɪv/
Adjective
definitive (comparative more definitive, superlative most definitive)
- explicitly defined
- conclusive or decisive
- definite, authoritative and complete
- Sir Thomas Browne
- A strict and definitive truth.
- Prescott
- Some definitive […] scheme of reconciliation.
- Sir Thomas Browne
- limiting; determining
- a definitive word
- (philately) general, not issued for commemorative purposes
- (obsolete) Determined; resolved.
- 1604, William Shakespeare, Measure, for Measure, V. i. 424:
- Never crave him. We are definitive.
- 1604, William Shakespeare, Measure, for Measure, V. i. 424:
Derived terms
Translations
explicitly defined
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conclusive or decisive
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definite, authoritative and complete
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Noun
definitive (plural definitives)
- (grammar) a word, such as a definite article or demonstrative pronoun, that defines or limits something
- (philately) an ordinary postage stamp that is part of a series of all denominations or is reprinted as needed to meet demand
- Synonym: definitive stamp
Translations
philately: ordinary postage stamp
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Esperanto
German
Latin
References
- definitive in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- definitive in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire Illustré Latin-Français, Hachette
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