From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishfinish with something/somebody phrasal verb1 FINISH DOING something have/be finished with something to no longer need to use something Have you finished with the scissors?2 have/be finished with somebody to have finished talking to someone or dealing with them, especially when you are angry with them or want to punish them Don’t go. I haven’t finished with you yet. ‘When I’m finished with you, ’ he said, ‘you’ll be lucky if you’re still alive.’3 to end a romantic or sexual relationship with someone So I told him I wanted to finish with him. → finish→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
have/be finished with something• And when he was finished with him there would be nothing left.• But Teravainen went to Yale, and Woosnam was finished with school by the age of sixteen.• I believe that I am finished with the war be-cause I no longer study obsessively the photographs of concentration-camp survivors.• Provided that the other House now passes the Bill in the same form, it will have finished with it for good.• So Duboc finally decided he was finished with Bailey.• We should be finished with that in the next ten days.• We were finished with training camp.• You can avoid this problem by deleting any files in: RAM- as soon as you have finished with them.have/be finished with somebody• And when he was finished with him there would be nothing left.• But Teravainen went to Yale, and Woosnam was finished with school by the age of sixteen.• I believe that I am finished with the war be-cause I no longer study obsessively the photographs of concentration-camp survivors.• Provided that the other House now passes the Bill in the same form, it will have finished with it for good.• So Duboc finally decided he was finished with Bailey.• We should be finished with that in the next ten days.• We were finished with training camp.• You can avoid this problem by deleting any files in: RAM- as soon as you have finished with them.