Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 3, 2026

Explicit (text)

The explicit of a text or document is either a final note indicating the end of the text and often including information about its place, date and authorship; or the final few words of the text itself. In the first case, it is similar to a colophon but always appearing at the end of the text. In the second case, it corresponds to the incipit, the first few words of a text. The end is also referred to as desinit, "it is finished".

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A Latin explicit that uses the word "explicit" source ↗

The explicit (from Latin: explicitus est; lit.'it is unrolled', as applied to scrolls) of a text or document is either a final note indicating the end of the text and often including information about its place, date and authorship; or the final few words of the text itself. In the first case, it is similar to a colophon but always appearing at the end of the text. In the second case, it corresponds to the incipit, the first few words of a text.1 The end is also referred to as desinit, "it is finished".

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