adjective, fin⋅er, fin⋅est, adverb, verb, fined, fin⋅ing, noun | 1. | of superior or best quality; of high or highest grade: fine wine. |
| 2. | choice, excellent, or admirable: a fine painting. |
| 3. | consisting of minute particles: fine sand; a fine purée. |
| 4. | very thin or slender: fine thread. |
| 5. | keen or sharp, as a tool: Is the knife fine enough to carve well? |
| 6. | delicate in texture; filmy: fine cotton fabric. |
| 7. | delicately fashioned: fine tracery. |
| 8. | highly skilled or accomplished: a fine musician. |
| 9. | trained to the maximum degree, as an athlete. |
| 10. | characterized by or affecting refinement or elegance: a fine lady. |
| 11. | polished or refined: fine manners. |
| 12. | affectedly ornate or elegant: A style so fine repels the average reader. |
| 13. | delicate or subtle: a fine distinction. |
| 14. | bright and clear: a fine day; fine skin. |
| 15. | healthy; well: In spite of his recent illness, he looks fine. |
| 16. | showy or smart; elegant in appearance: a bird of fine plumage. |
| 17. | good-looking or handsome: a fine young man. |
| 18. | (of a precious metal or its alloy) free from impurities or containing a large amount of pure metal: fine gold; Sterling silver is 92.5 percent fine. |
| 19. | Informal. in an excellent manner; very well: He did fine on the exams. She sings fine. |
| 20. | very small: She writes so fine I can hardly read it. |
| 21. | Billiards, Pool. in such a way that the driven ball barely touches the object ball in passing. |
| 22. | Nautical. as close as possible to the wind: sailing fine. |
| 23. | to become fine or finer, as by refining. |
| 24. | to become less, as in size or proportions; reduce; diminish (often fol. by down): The plumpness fines down with exercise. |
| 25. | to make fine or finer, esp. by refining or pulverizing. |
| 26. | to reduce the size or proportions of (often used with down or away): to fine down the heavy features; to fine away superfluous matter in a design. |
| 27. | to clarify (wines or spirits) by filtration. |
| 28. | fines,
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| 29. | cut fine, to calculate precisely, esp. without allowing for possible error or accident: To finish in ten minutes is to cut it too fine. |

noun, verb, fined, fin⋅ing.| 1. | a sum of money imposed as a penalty for an offense or dereliction: a parking fine. |
| 2. | Law. a fee paid by a feudal tenant to the landlord, as on the renewal of tenure. |
| 3. | English Law. (formerly) a conveyance of land through decree of a court, based upon a simulated lawsuit. |
| 4. | Archaic. a penalty of any kind. |
| 5. | to subject to a fine or pecuniary penalty; punish by a fine: The judge fined him and released him on parole. |
| 6. | in fine,
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fine 1 (fīn) adj. fin·er, fin·est
To make or become finer, purer, or cleaner. [Middle English fin, from Old French, from Latin fīnis, end, supreme degree.] fine'ness n. |