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Later on   /lˈeɪtər ɑn/   Listen
Later on

adverb
1.
Happening at a time subsequent to a reference time.  Synonyms: after, afterward, afterwards, later, subsequently.  "He's going to the store but he'll be back here later" , "It didn't happen until afterward" , "Two hours after that"






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Later on" Quotes from Famous Books



... now return to the Evening Star fishing-smack, but only for a few minutes at present. Later on we shall have occasion to visit her under stirring circumstances. We saw her last heading eastward to her fishing-ground in the North Sea. We present her now, after a two months' trip, sailing to ...
— The Young Trawler • R.M. Ballantyne

... you dye that wonderful chestnut hair?" I asked her presently—and was sorry next minute for the pain that shot across her face, but I just wanted to hint at what I designed not to reveal fully till later on, and thus to hint too that it was not as one of the number of her defilers that ...
— The Quest of the Golden Girl • Richard le Gallienne

... Later on the special sexual needs of the boy or the girl can be explained, the necessity of cleanliness and the danger of self-abuse. The need of self-control and the possibility of deflecting physical desire to other ...
— Herself - Talks with Women Concerning Themselves • E. B. Lowry

... Steve in answer to another of her questions, "lambs are kind of cute. Sometimes I feel bad for a lamb myself when his mother won't have anything to do with him. You ought to be out here later on, Miss Janet, when the lambs have all been born and are starting to get frisky. That's ...
— The Wrong Woman • Charles D. Stewart

... special circumstances; sometimes he will conclude his prayer with the formula 'whosoever thou art,' or 'and any other name by which thou mayest desire to be called.' The numen is thus vague in his conception but specialised in his function, and so later on, when certain deities have acquired definite names and become prominent above the rest, the worshipper in appealing to them will add a cult-title, to indicate the special character in which he wishes the deity to hear: the ...
— The Religion of Ancient Rome • Cyril Bailey


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