Y08W31VC Word Roots — -fin- (end / limit)

The root -fin- comes from Latin and carries the core meaning of 'end' or 'limit'. It appears in words that describe boundaries, conclusions, precision, or the act of bringing something to completion. Understanding this root unlocks the meaning of many academic and formal English words. This module explores six such words drawn from the Academic Vocab list, plus three further examples in the Word Families section.

Word Families

These three words all connect to the root -fin-. As you read, notice how the meaning 'end / limit' can help you infer unfamiliar words and use them with more control.

define

/dɪˈfaɪn/

de‑fine

verb | [define – defined – defined]

To state clearly what something means or what its limits are.

Word Breakdown: de- (prefix meaning ‘completely’) + -fin (root meaning ‘end/limit’) — to define is to ‘thoroughly mark the limits’

Example: Before analysing the policy, the researcher carefully defined the key terms she would use.

Synonyms: explain, specify, clarify

Collocations: define a term, define the scope, define the problem

finite

/ˈfaɪnaɪt/

fi‑nite

adjective

Having limits or an end; not infinite.

Example: The earth’s natural resources are finite and cannot support unlimited economic growth.

Synonyms: limited, bounded, restricted

Collocations: finite resources, finite time, a finite number

refine

/rɪˈfaɪn/

re‑fine

verb | [refine – refined – refined]

To improve or make more precise; to remove imperfections.

Example: The researcher refined her methodology after the pilot study revealed several design flaws.

Synonyms: improve, develop, perfect

Collocations: refine an argument, refine the approach, continually refine

Academic Vocab

evidence

/ˈɛvɪdəns/

ev‑i‑dence

noun

Facts, information, or objects that help prove or support a claim.

Word family: evident (adj.), evidently (adv.)

Example: Strong essays draw on evidence from multiple credible sources to support each key claim.

Synonyms: proof, data, support

Collocations: provide evidence, evidence suggests, based on the evidence

substantiate

/səbˈstænʃɪeɪt/

sub‑stan‑ti‑ate

verb | [substantiate – substantiated – substantiated]

To provide evidence to prove or support a claim or argument.

Example: Every claim in an academic essay must be substantiated with relevant and reliable evidence.

Synonyms: support, prove, verify

Collocations: substantiate a claim, fail to substantiate, substantiate with evidence

corroborate

/kəˈrɒbəreɪt/

cor‑rob‑o‑rate

verb | [corroborate – corroborated – corroborated]

To confirm or give support to a statement or theory by providing additional evidence.

Word Breakdown: cor- (prefix meaning ‘together’)

Word family: corroboration (n.)

Example: The second study corroborated the findings of the first, strengthening confidence in the results.

Synonyms: confirm, support, validate

Collocations: corroborate findings, corroborate a claim, independently corroborated

verify

/ˈvɛrɪfaɪ/

ver‑i‑fy

verb | [verify – verified – verified]

To check or confirm that something is true, accurate, or correct.

Word family: verification (n.), verifiable (adj.)

Example: Journalists are expected to verify information before publishing it.

Synonyms: confirm, check, validate

Collocations: verify a claim, verify the data, independently verify

confirm

/kənˈfɜːm/

con‑firm

verb | [confirm – confirmed – confirmed]

To establish that something is true or correct, often by additional checking.

Word Breakdown: con- (prefix meaning ‘together’)

Word family: confirmation (n.)

Example: The second round of tests confirmed the initial findings beyond reasonable doubt.

Synonyms: verify, establish, prove

Collocations: confirm findings, confirm a hypothesis, independently confirm

this is supported by

/ðɪs ɪz səˈpɔːtɪd baɪ/

this is sup‑ported by

phrase

A writing function phrase used to introduce evidence that strengthens the preceding claim.

Example: The population grew rapidly during this period; this is supported by census data showing a 40% increase over ten years.

Synonyms: this is demonstrated by, evidence for this includes, this is confirmed by

Collocations: this is supported by, this position is supported by, this is strongly supported by

Confusing Words

subjective vs objective

Subjective and objective are essential terms in academic writing.

  • subjective — Subjective describes a view or judgement that is based on personal feelings, opinions, or interpretations rather than facts: 'Whether the ending is satisfying is a subjective judgement.'
  • objective — Objective describes something that is based on observable facts rather than personal feelings, and is not influenced by personal bias: 'The data provides an objective measure of the programme’s effectiveness.'

Memory rule: A useful rule: subjective = personal, based on opinion or feeling; objective = factual, based on evidence independent of personal bias. Strong academic writing acknowledges when judgements are subjective and relies on objective evidence where possible.