latter

[ lat-er ]
/ ˈlæt ər /

adjective

being the second mentioned of two (distinguished from former): I prefer the latter offer to the former one.
more advanced in time; later: in these latter days of human progress.
near or comparatively near to the end: the latter part of the century.
Obsolete. last1; final.

Origin of latter

before 1000; Middle English latt(e)re, Old English lætra, comparative of læt late

WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH latter

former later latter ladder latter

Definition for latter (2 of 2)

late
[ leyt ]
/ leɪt /

adjective, lat·er or lat·ter, lat·est or last.

adverb, lat·er, lat·est.

Origin of late

before 900; Middle English; Old English læt slow, late; cognate with German lass slothful, Old Norse latr, Gothic lats slow, lazy, Latin lassus tired

OTHER WORDS FROM late

late·ness, noun o·ver·late, adjective o·ver·late·ness, noun

WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH late

former later latter

Example sentences from the Web for latter

British Dictionary definitions for latter (1 of 2)

latter
/ (ˈlætə) /

adjective (prenominal)

  1. denoting the second or second mentioned of two: distinguished from former
  2. (as noun; functioning as sing or plural)the latter is not important
near or nearer the end the latter part of a film
more advanced in time or sequence; later

usage for latter

The latter should only be used to refer to the second of two items: many people choose to go by hovercraft rather than use the ferry, but I prefer the latter. The last of three or more items can be referred to as the last-named

British Dictionary definitions for latter (2 of 2)

late
/ (leɪt) /

adjective

adverb

Derived forms of late

lateness, noun

Word Origin for late

Old English læt; related to Old Norse latr, Gothic lats

usage for late

Since late can mean deceased, many people think it is better to avoid using this word to refer to the person who held a post or position before its present holder: the previous (not the late) editor of The Times

Idioms and Phrases with latter

late