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aftermath
[af-ter-math, ahf-]
aftermath
/ -ˌmæθ, ˈɑːftəˌmɑːθ /
noun
signs or results of an event or occurrence considered collectively, esp of a catastrophe or disaster
the aftermath of war
agriculture a second mowing or crop of grass from land that has already yielded one crop earlier in the same year
Word History and Origins
Origin of aftermath1
Word History and Origins
Origin of aftermath1
Example Sentences
Kennedy visited the offices in the aftermath but he did not meet with staff members and continued to criticise the agency's performance.
In one note, he envisaged the aftermath of a public hanging, with "surgeons fighting over corpses".
The aftermath of that defeat turned sour as hugely popular manager Mauricio Pochettino failed to get the backing he believed he deserved - the fracture with his chairman leading to his sacking six months later.
Here are some of the key things I've now learnt about what to do in the immediate aftermath of an accident.
Gibson’s new memoir, “Eternally Electric: The Message in My Music,” could only have been this honest in the aftermath of her beloved momager’s death in 2022.
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