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After

After is a common English word with several grammatical functions and a range of related meanings tied to time, sequence, and position. Most often it acts as a preposition meaning following in time or place, or subsequent to something: The concert started after the opening act. They arrived after sunset. It can also function as a conjunction linking a dependent clause: I left after the rain stopped. In some senses it can indicate pursuit or being behind in space: the dog ran after the ball. As a stand-alone adverb, its ordinary sense is usually expressed with the related form afterwards.

Etymology and origin: After comes from Old English æfter, of Germanic origin, originally with a spatial or

Grammar and usage: As a preposition, after governs a noun phrase or clause that denotes what follows

Common phrases and derivatives: after all, after noon, after hours, aftertaste, aftermath, afterparty. Spelling variants for

See also: aft (nautical term for the rear), post- (a related prefix indicating subsequent timing), afterwards.

chronological
sense
of
behind
or
following.
It
has
cognates
in
other
Germanic
languages,
such
as
Dutch
na
and
German
nach.
The
word
has
broadened
in
modern
English
to
cover
temporal
succession,
order,
and
many
fixed
expressions.
in
time
or
space.
As
a
conjunction,
it
introduces
clauses
describing
subsequent
events.
The
word
also
appears
as
a
prefix
in
compound
words
that
convey
something
that
follows
another
thing,
such
as
afterimage,
aftercare,
aftershock,
aftertaste,
and
afterword.
The
adverbial
form
typically
appears
in
set
phrases
such
as
afterwards
or
after
that,
rather
than
in
generic
adverb
use.
the
adverb
include
afterwards
and
afterward,
with
the
former
more
common
in
British
usage
and
the
latter
in
American
usage.