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late adjective [ leɪt ]

• doing something or taking place after the expected, proper, or usual time.
• "his late arrival"
Similar: behind time, behind schedule, behind, behindhand, not on time, unpunctual, tardy, running late, overdue, long-overdue, delayed, long-delayed, belated, slow, dilatory,
Opposite: punctual, early, fast,
• belonging or taking place far on in a particular period.
• "they won the game with a late goal"
• (of a specified person) no longer alive.
• "the late Francis Bacon"
Similar: dead, deceased, departed, lamented, passed on/away, lost, expired, gone, extinct, perished,
Opposite: alive, existing,

late adverb

• after the expected, proper, or usual time.
• "she arrived late"
Similar: behind schedule, behind time, behindhand, unpunctually, belatedly, tardily, at the last minute, at the tail end, dilatorily, slowly, recently,
Opposite: early, betimes,
• far on in time; towards the end of a period.
• "it happened late in 1994"
• formerly but not now living or working in a specified place or institution.
• "Mrs Halford, late of the County Records Office"
Origin: Old English læt (adjective; also in the sense ‘slow, tardy’), late (adverb), of Germanic origin; related to German lass, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin lassus ‘weary’, let1, and let2.

better late than never

• it is better to do something or arrive after the expected time than not do it or arrive at all.
"it took them the majority of the campaign to come to that conclusion, but better late than never"

late in the day

• at a late stage in proceedings, especially too late to be useful.
"it's a bit late in the day to go into all this"

of late

• recently.
"she'd been drinking too much of late"



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