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whenceafter

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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English

Etymology

From whence + after.

Pronunciation

Adverb

whenceafter (not comparable)

  1. (rare) After which; whereafter.
    • 1918–1925, Booth Tarkington [aut.] and Alan Seymour Downer [ed.], On Plays, Playwrights, and Playgoers (1959), page 16
      Its light came from thirty feet to the left of it, and the moon itself rose audibly until a stagehand juggled it, whenceafter it ceased to rise.
    • 1919, Holden Edward Sampson, Theou Sophia II: “Re-Generation” (2003 reprint), page 16
      In the case of each [Master] his Mission was revealed to him at a certain period of his life-career, whenceafter he set himself apart from the world…in order to fulfil his Mission, free from worldly ties and entanglements.
    • 1938, Norman St. Barbe Sladen, The Real Le Queux, page 77:
      The spy followed Le Queux again the next day in the streets of Bucharest and Le Queux complained to the police, whenceafter the spy was not seen again.

See also

Here-, there-, and where- words
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