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"In fine"

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May 24, 2006, 13:49
Hic et ubique
"In fine"
I was reading poetry, and wondered while reading this: what does in fine mean?
May 24, 2006, 20:07
<Asa Lovejoy>
I interpret as meaning "in all details."
May 24, 2006, 20:33
Kalleh
Reminds me of:

Thirty days hath September,
April, June, and November;
All the rest have thirty-one
Excepting February alone:
Which hath but twenty-eight, in fine,
Till Leap Year gives it twenty-nine.

I hadn't realized how many versions that poem has.
May 25, 2006, 19:38
tinman
The AHD says in fine is an idiom meaning "In conclusion; finally. In summation; in brief," while M-W simply says it means "in short." The OED Online says in fine, in the fine, or more rarely, a fine or at fine means "(a) in the end, at last; (b) to conclude or sum up, finally; also, in short," and traces it back to 1297: "(a) 1297 R. GLOUC. (1724) 91 The noble Constantyn, (that was kyng here of this lond, & emperour atte fyn). . "

By the way, the th (in The, that and this) in that quote were represented by that strange symbol I talked about in an earlier post. I forget its name, but two people on this board told me what it was (I forget who). Then I discovered running my cursor over it will tell me what it means.

I've always interpreted the "in fine" in Richard Cory as "in short."

Richard Cory has been set to music in the CD But Yesterday Is Not Today-The American Art Song 1927-1972. Scroll down and you can listen to samples of some of the songs. You can find the words to most of the other songs here.


Tinman
May 25, 2006, 21:01
<Asa Lovejoy>
quote:
Originally posted by tinman:

By the way, the th (in The, that and this) in that quote were represented by that strange symbol I talked about in an earlier post. I forget its name, but two people on this board told me what it was (I forget who).

Thorn, perhaps?

quote:
I've always interpreted the "in fine" in Richard Cory as "in short."


I suppose if it comes from Latin, it would literally mean in the end, or at the finish.