English phrase from drama scenes

What Does "i don't think you understand you're finished" Mean?

Learn what "i don't think you understand you're finished" means, when people say it, and how to use it naturally in English.

Intermediate
Rude
Harsh
Threaten

I don't think you understand, Jayden. You're finished.

This means the speaker is threatening someone by saying they have already lost or are in serious trouble.

From Love Me Or I Die, Episode 40

When do people say this?

Scene Context

Someone warns that the other person does not understand how serious the situation is and is already defeated.

Usage Scenario

Use this only in very heated or fictional situations; it is aggressive and threatening. It is not appropriate for polite or professional speech.

Better ways to say it

1
I don't think you understand, you're finished.
2
You're finished.
3
You don't understand — you're done.

How to learn English with ReelFluent

1
Discover

Scenes unlock real expressions as you watch

2
Understand

Tap to translate or use dual subtitles

3
Use

Practice immediately with AI Characters

4
Retain

Reinforce with quick quizzes and repetition

Learn practical English from scenes, not drills.

Build speaking confidence with drama-based context, instant explanations, and AI-powered practice tailored to real conversations.

Start learning

Threatening Phrases in English

What Does "i don't think you understand you're finished" Mean? - ReelFluent