Say $\mathcal{C}$ is the Abelian category of finitely-generated modules over some $k$-algebra $A$. Then an object $M\in \mathcal{C}$ is finite-dimensional over $k$ if and only if $\text{Hom}(P, M)$ is finite-dimensional for any projective $P\in \mathcal{C}.$
I want a word for this "finiteness" property of $M$ relative to the category $\mathcal{C}$. I also would like to use a similar notion in the dg sense. Here I want to assume we are given the category $\mathcal{P} = \text{Perf}(A)$ of perfect modules and we say that an object $M$ of the ind-completion of $\mathcal{P}$ is "finite" if $\hom(P, M)$ is finite-dimensional in finitely-many homological degrees for any $P\in \mathcal{P}$. (This once again corresponds to the complex of $A$-modules $M$ having finite-dimensional cohomology).
I'd love to call both of these properties "perfectly finite", but don't want to introduce new words if standard nomenclature exists.