hereafter vs hereunder what difference
what is difference between hereafter and hereunder
English
Etymology
From Old English hēræfter (“in the aftertime; later on”); equivalent to here + after.
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /hɪɹˈæftɚ/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /hɪəˈɹɑːftə/
- Hyphenation: here‧af‧ter
Adverb
hereafter (not comparable)
- (dated) In time to come; in some future time or state.
- From now on.
- Sequentially after this point (in time, in the writing constituting a document, in the movement along a path, etc.)
Synonyms
- (in time to come): someday; see also Thesaurus:one day
- (from now on): henceforth; henceforward; see also Thesaurus:henceforth
- (sequentially after this point): followed by; see also Thesaurus:subsequently or Thesaurus:then
Translations
See also
- Category:English pronominal adverbs
Noun
hereafter (countable and uncountable, plural hereafters)
- A future existence or state.
- Existence after death.
Synonyms
- (a future state): aftertime; see also Thesaurus:the future
- (existence after death): afterlife, eternal life; see also Thesaurus:life after death or Thesaurus:afterlife
Derived terms
- sweet hereafter
Translations
Adjective
hereafter (not comparable)
- (archaic) Future.
Synonyms
- unborn; see also Thesaurus:future
See also
Anagrams
- featherer
English
Etymology
here + under
Adverb
hereunder (not comparable)
- Under this.
Translations
See also
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