English edit

Verb edit

DNF

  1. (sports) Initialism of did not finish.
    Coordinate terms: DNS, DNQ
  2. (geocaching) Initialism of did not find.
  3. (Internet slang, social media) Initialism of do not follow.

Verb edit

DNF (third-person singular simple present DNFs, present participle DNFing, simple past and past participle DNFed or DNF'ed)

  1. To fail to finish, as a sporting event or a piece of media.
    While I used to love them, now I keep DNFing superhero movies.
    • 2014, Phil Gaimon, Pro Cycling on $10 a Day: From Fat Kid to Euro Pro[1], VeloPress, →ISBN:
      He'd DNFed and could have gone home an hour earlier, but he wanted to see me win.
    • 2021 August 10, Danika Ellis, “I'm Breaking Up With 3-Star Reads”, in Book Riot[2], archived from the original on August 16, 2021:
      Others refuse to ever DNF, slowly slogging through even the worst of books. I fall somewhere in the middle. I'll DNF a book early on if I realize I'm unlikely to enjoy it.

See also edit

Noun edit

DNF (plural DNFs)

  1. (mathematics) Initialism of disjunctive normal form.

Proper noun edit

DNF

  1. (British, cartography) Initialism of Digital National Framework.

Anagrams edit